Christopher’s review of The Notebook: A History of Thinking on Paper > Likes and Comments

1 like · 
Comments Showing 1-1 of 1 (1 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Roland (new)

Roland Allen Hi, Sorry that you dropped this but if you can force on past the introduction you'll find nearly all of the book to be a history of the ways notebooks have been used to think, with plenty of analysis and (towards the end) philosophy (Clark & Chalmers) and neuroscience for you to get your teeth into. Admittedly there's no Erich Auerbach or Carl Schmitt: although I looked up the latter, because your quotation made me curious, and I must say that his thinking about diary use is fairly pointless, as he clearly knew nothing of the history of diary writing. (To be fair, he couldn't have: no-one knew where diary writing came from until the 1970s. An interesting story, which is in the book...) If I were you I'd go to the book's excellent index and see if any topics there take your fancy. Best! Roly


back to top