April 10, 2007

How to Work Like Leonardo da Vinci

There's a good book by Michael J. Gelb
called How to Think Like Leonardo da Vinci.

I've linked to the author's home page above and here for your convenience.

Yet before I linked to Gelb's page, I wrote my headline above.

You'll see why as I extend the entry with a passage from one of my reporter's notebooks
that I carried during my term as a Visiting Fellow (Professor) at Harris Manchester College,
University of Oxford
in 2005.

Here is the entry, from 04 May 2005.
It is numbered from the sequence of entries I was making during that one stint in the notebook:

4.2.4 How to act/do like/as Leonardo da Vinci:

4.2.4.1 Keep a notebook. L's notebooks are treasured to this day. One of the most impt purchases Bill Gates made when he became the world's richest man, was to buy a notebook of Leonardo da Vinci. He bought it from a wealthy oil company owner--Occidental Petroleum's Armand Hammer.[1] [1 cite]

4.2.4.2 So keep a notebook. Mark Twain did (cite volume 3 of Mark Twain's Notebooks and Journals).

4.2.4.3 Here is what Walter Benjamin said, the great German literary critic and essayist:

"Let no thought pass incognito. Keep your notebook as carefully as the authorities keep their registry
of aliens." [From "13 Theses on Writing."]

Here you have three great thinkers who used a notebook to remember what they thought
and observed.

I remember this observation from 2005, when I was in Oxford thinking about the Information Renaissance
in a city that was inspired by the European Renaissance.

And I wrote it down in my notebook.

That is how today I bring it to you.

Work like Leonardo da Vinci. Keep a notebook.

Posted by Jay Gillette at April 10, 2007 09:22 PM
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