Perhaps with your background you could explain Zettelkasten. There seems to 
be an almost cult-like culture around a system of taking notes (by software 
or index cards). https://zettelkasten.de/ .

The idea seems to be to let ideas emerge without forcing them into slots, 
though I'm not sure how that happens. It looks overall to be a good match 
for TiddlyWiki except possibly for scalability.

-- Mark

On Tuesday, March 27, 2018 at 11:48:00 AM UTC-7, @TiddlyTweeter wrote:
>
>
>
> Mat wrote:
>>
>> If you, like me, are interested in the topic of "note taking" then you 
>> will like this blog ...
>>
>  http://takingnotenow.blogspot.se
>>
>
> Ciao Mat. Its an interesting blog. Partly because it harks back to an 
> earlier time when "textbases" were more of a hot topic.
>
> My interest in notetaking, and my interest in TW also, stems from by 
> background as an anthropologist. At one time the issues fieldworkers 
> (ethnographers) had in notating field-notes were at the cutting edge of 
> developing these kinds of tools.
>
> Its worth mentioning a few things that characterised the mindset of that 
> time that are still relevant now.
>
> -- "Textbases" were considered to be tools that *combined structured data 
> and unstructured notes* in a tool that *resembled a word-processer* but 
> with additional data fields you could define at will as needed (sound 
> familiar? :-)
>
> -- There was great concern that "*pattern can emerge*", not be 
> strictured. At the time textbases emerged it was part of an effort to get 
> away from overly "pre-structured data-slot" systems that were fine for 
> counting bodies in Newcastle but were useless for helping an anthropologist 
> log a funerary ritual in Somalia that, as yet, they could not understand, 
> only observe and note.
>
> -- Importantly they had ideas of "*definable emergent structure*" too. 
> I.e. you need time to see pattern, but you can't explain it sociologically 
> well unless you can go further and demonstrate how those patterns function 
> empirically (say relating marriage to cow herd size amongst the Masai). 
> This is one thing TW can do *extremely well* and much more usefully than 
> most any other tool of its family type.
>
> I could go on. But I think you get the idea. There is a long history. And 
> its nowhere near completed yet.
>
> Best wishes
> Josiah
>

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