I'm pretty sure Florian has it. And I bet you encountered it one step out 
from the Zettelkasten bibliography I pointed you to a few weeks ago:
https://zettelkasten.sorenbjornstad.com/#ZettelkastenDetailsTrap

On Tuesday, September 15, 2020 at 6:29:01 PM UTC-5 [email protected] 
wrote:

> Hi Bimba,
>
> I feel like this is coming from Bret Victor: “The Future of Programming”
>
> https://vimeo.com/71278954
>
> at 31′ 22″
>
> “The most dangerous thought you can have as a creative person is to
> think you know what you're doing.”
>
> and at 32′ 22″
>
> “I think the first step is you have to say to yourself: ‘I don't know
> what I'm doing. We as a field don't know what we're doing.’ I think
> you have to say: ‘We don't know what programming is. We don't know
> what computing is. We don't even know what a computer is.’ And once
> you truly understand that and once you truly believe that then you're
> free and you can think anything.”
>
> See the slides at http://worrydream.com/dbx/
>
> Regards,
> Florian
>
> Am 29.08.20 um 12:12 schrieb bimlas:
> > I’ve read a quote before about programming, but if I remember correctly, 
> I 
> > found it about note-taking methods. Does anyone know? Where does this 
> quote 
> > come from?
> > It was similar, if I remember correctly:
> > "When we start programming, we have to forget what programming is, what 
> a 
> > computer is, and that's the only way we can be really creative."
> > 
>

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