I don’t have much of a “desk”, so you’d have to unearth one of many baglike things.
Academic reading tends to be law review articles about copyrights, patents, privacy, telecom, etc: trying to keep up with the current state of areas I care about and would like to work in. Nonfiction is law/legal theory, economics, science, and “big think” type books. Some are trying to fix what I think are gaping holes in my education, some to have read what other people in my social circle are reading, some for pleasure, some for reference.
I usually keep more than one book open at a time. Right now I am reading Good Faith Collaboration, which is a new academic book about Wikipedia and its social structures; The Big Necessity for bathroom reading (because the thought of reading that as a bathroom book made me laugh); Guns, Germs, and Steel is on my nightstand (yes, I know, I’m a few years behind on that one...). I have The Gridlock Economy in my totebag because I was referencing it for a project; The Public Domain open in electronic form for the same reason.
Other things always present in my working space: pens, paper (don’t ask me to do anything regarding math or logic without a writing implement in my hand), something to drink, remnants of craft supplies, something that plays music, something that tells time, something that will hold my hair out of my face, probably stray books of sheet music also. Things generally not present: a telephone or anything that makes unexpected noises.
Concerning “Guns, Germs, and Steel “: Murray Gell-Mann is involved in some interesting research on general patterns of civilization. But his and Diamond’s schemes are just about some general and indirect indicators, not about what the essence of “civilization” is. To get an idea of that, I am curious about instances where “civilization” went down quickly. This puts e.g. “Berlin Diary: The Journal of a Foreign Correspondent 1934-1941”, and “Human Smoke: The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization” on my desk. A very remarkable case is told about in Simone Weil’s “L’agonie d’une civilisation”. I scanned two essay by Zbigniew Herbert on decivilization from this—someone curious to get them? “The Dream of Scipio” by Ian Pears sketches (in typical french history-through-novels manner) a thrilling pattern of several critical moments of the last 1500 years of European history.
I don’t have much of a “desk”, so you’d have to unearth one of many baglike things.
Academic reading tends to be law review articles about copyrights, patents, privacy, telecom, etc: trying to keep up with the current state of areas I care about and would like to work in. Nonfiction is law/legal theory, economics, science, and “big think” type books. Some are trying to fix what I think are gaping holes in my education, some to have read what other people in my social circle are reading, some for pleasure, some for reference.
I usually keep more than one book open at a time. Right now I am reading Good Faith Collaboration, which is a new academic book about Wikipedia and its social structures; The Big Necessity for bathroom reading (because the thought of reading that as a bathroom book made me laugh); Guns, Germs, and Steel is on my nightstand (yes, I know, I’m a few years behind on that one...). I have The Gridlock Economy in my totebag because I was referencing it for a project; The Public Domain open in electronic form for the same reason.
Or you could take a glimpse through my LibraryThing: http://www.librarything.com/profile/mindspillage
Other things always present in my working space: pens, paper (don’t ask me to do anything regarding math or logic without a writing implement in my hand), something to drink, remnants of craft supplies, something that plays music, something that tells time, something that will hold my hair out of my face, probably stray books of sheet music also. Things generally not present: a telephone or anything that makes unexpected noises.
Concerning “Guns, Germs, and Steel “: Murray Gell-Mann is involved in some interesting research on general patterns of civilization. But his and Diamond’s schemes are just about some general and indirect indicators, not about what the essence of “civilization” is. To get an idea of that, I am curious about instances where “civilization” went down quickly. This puts e.g. “Berlin Diary: The Journal of a Foreign Correspondent 1934-1941”, and “Human Smoke: The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization” on my desk. A very remarkable case is told about in Simone Weil’s “L’agonie d’une civilisation”. I scanned two essay by Zbigniew Herbert on decivilization from this—someone curious to get them? “The Dream of Scipio” by Ian Pears sketches (in typical french history-through-novels manner) a thrilling pattern of several critical moments of the last 1500 years of European history.