Highlights

id978076956

I’ve been reflecting on something French philosopher Roland Barthes understood: notes aren’t about hoarding knowledge or building a perfect archive. They’re about getting to the real point—writing.

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id978077102

French philosopher Roland Barthes, who used index cards (‘fiches’) extensively, recognised this. He understood that the purpose of scholarly notes is not: - to understand everything, - to remember everything, or - to record everything. No, the purpose of one’s notes, he held, is to start writing. Barthes wasn’t creating a knowledge bank. He was writing. He used his notes, sometimes several times over, as prompts, inspiration, and cues for his written and published output.

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id978078137

use your note system to explore your enduring concerns, those issues and questions you find yourself returning to over and over.

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id978078389

Extensive reading benefits greatly from having a focus like this. You read widely, only really concerning yourself with the problem (or problems) you bring to the text with you. This provides a framework for your note making and it renders the task manageable. Your list of key problems guides your note-making and helps clarify what really matters to you.

He experimentado algo de esto al leer junto con Obsidian, agregando citas, ideas y preguntas en notas nuevas o existentes. Me da una sensación muy nítida de estar construyendo algo, no tirando palabras al vacío.

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id978079372

Over time I’ve reluctantly discovered that my notes are only as useful as what I do with them. Sure, they help me remember things, and to keep going where I left off. They are the space where I do my thinking — but crucially, provided I do it right, they help me write.

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