In this case, it's mostly about the additional perspectives on how learning works from the act of managing your information through various note-taking methods. I also restructured the note on org-babel and moved as its own note on the hierarchical notebook. I think summarizing a tool and giving my own comments about it is a nicer way of describing it. Plus, I can freely link between any other types of note so I figured it would be better. That said, I should be picky on how to make org-roam entries. And also org-roam v2 is better, after all. :)
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Zettelkasten
Zettelkasten is a note-taking method popularized by Niklas Luhmann known for his prolific writings from 400 academic articles to 70 books in a lifetime. This system, manifested as a shelf of 60,000 notes, was credited as his writing partner.
The main idea of this system is creating a global cloud of Non-linear notes, individually called as zettels, without any hierarchy or separation. This non-linear system encourages freely linking between each ideas making it easier for gaining new ideas similar to neurons in your brain.
While the absence of hierarchy is good for free-linking and filling gaps between wildly different topics, those ideas have to start from somewhere. The traditional Linear notes still have a place that it enforces structure. Eventually, if the structured note is getting too big, you can separate the points into multiple zettels.
To make it more efficient, the workflow further describes the idea of creating good future-proof notes (see Future-proofing your notes is only worth if the future is relevant). Most writings about this seem to agree to the following ideas.
- A method to capture notes on-the-fly. This encourages to capture as many ideas as possible.
- The lack of hierarchy to describe the notes. This enforces easier organization and classifying your notes.
- The gradual improvement of the captured notes into Evergreen notes.