A modern-day Commonplace Book?

From a post by Jamie Todd Rubin, “Going Paper­less: How Penul­ti­mate and Ever­note Have Replaced My Pock­et Note­book,” I’ve learned the con­cept of the “Com­mon­place Book,” which he attrib­ut­es it to Jefferson:

The notion for the “com­mon­place book” comes from Thomas Jef­fer­son, who used just such a book to cap­ture pret­ty much any­thing: pas­sages from books he was read­ing, notes, sketch­es, you name it.

Wikipedia takes it fur­ther back in its entry on Com­mon­place books. The name comes from the latin locus com­mu­nis and the form got its start in a new form of fifteen-century bound journal:

Such books were essen­tial­ly scrap­books filled with items of every kind: med­ical recipes, quotes, let­ters, poems, tables of weights and mea­sures, proverbs, prayers, legal for­mu­las. Com­mon­places were used by read­ers, writ­ers, stu­dents, and schol­ars as an aid for remem­ber­ing use­ful con­cepts or facts they had learned. Each com­mon­place book was unique to its cre­ator’s par­tic­u­lar interests.

I real­ly like this idea. I’ve been think­ing a lot about work­flows recent­ly (and lis­ten­ing to way too many geek pod­casts on my com­mute). I’ve been mud­dling my way toward some­thing like this. I’m cur­rent­ly using Ever­note to log a lot of my life but there’s scraps of inter­est­ing tid­bits that have no home. An exam­ple from half an hour ago: I was lis­ten­ing to Pan­do­ra the train when along came an unfa­mil­iar song I want­ed to remem­ber for lat­er. A Com­mon­place book would be a nat­ur­al place to record this infor­ma­tion (First Aid Kit’s Lion’s Roar if you must know, think Bon­nie Raitt steps out with Townes van Zandt for a secret assig­na­tion at a Stock­holm open mic night.)

Of course, being a twenty-first cen­tu­ry dig­i­tal native, my work­flow would be elec­tron­ic. What I imag­ine is a sin­gle Ever­note page that holds a mon­th’s worth of the bits that come along. I have some­thing sim­i­lar with a log, a sin­gle file with one line entries (lots of Ifttt automa­tions like logged Foursquare check-ins, along with notes-to-self of mile­stones like issues sent to press, etc.). I’ll start set­ting this up.

2 thoughts on “A modern-day Commonplace Book?

  1. What a great song. Thanks for intro­duc­ing me to it. I’m hear­ing a female ver­sion of Bob Dylan with the Bat­tle­field Band. 🙂

  2. I’m 7 years too late, but the answer to what you are look­ing for is Super­Me­mo, a piece of soft­ware for Win­dows. I have been using it for 14 years and I love it. I’m get­ting ready to make YouTube videos explain­ing how Super­Me­mo works (Long sto­ry short: it is a smart flash­card sys­tem with tools that allow for read­ing books and jot­ting down ideas), and one of the videos will be about how basi­cal­ly Super­Me­mo is the mod­ern day ver­sion of a Com­mon­place book. If you look up infor­ma­tion on “Incre­men­tal Read­ing” and “Incre­men­tal Writ­ing” there is more info. I was look­ing up arti­cles about Com­mon­place books and found this entry, and I though “Wow, Super­Me­mo total­ly fits the cri­te­ria of what you’re look­ing for!”

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