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Complete guide to Zettelkasten note-taking methodology. Use when creating notes, establishing connections, or building knowledge management systems in Obsidian. Covers atomic notes, literature notes, MOCs, and linking strategies.

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SKILL.md

name zettelkasten-methodology
description Complete guide to Zettelkasten note-taking methodology. Use when creating notes, establishing connections, or building knowledge management systems in Obsidian. Covers atomic notes, literature notes, MOCs, and linking strategies.

Zettelkasten Methodology

The Zettelkasten (German for "slip box") is a personal knowledge management system developed by German sociologist Niklas Luhmann, who used it to produce over 70 books and 400 scholarly articles.

Core Principles

1. Atomicity

Each note contains exactly one idea. This is the most important principle.

Why atomicity matters:

  • Makes notes reusable in different contexts
  • Enables precise linking
  • Prevents notes from becoming outdated
  • Allows ideas to be combined in new ways

Test for atomicity:

  • Can this note be split without losing meaning?
  • Does this note make one clear point?
  • Would I link to this entire note or just part of it?

2. Autonomy

Notes must be self-contained and understandable without reading other notes.

Requirements:

  • Complete sentences, not fragments
  • Sufficient context included
  • No pronouns referring to external content
  • Could be understood in 5 years

3. Connectivity

Notes gain value through connections to other notes.

Types of connections:

  • Support: This note strengthens another idea
  • Contrast: This note contradicts or nuances another
  • Extension: This note builds upon another
  • Application: This note applies another concept
  • Association: This note reminds me of another

4. Personal Expression

Always write in your own words.

Never:

  • Copy-paste quotes as notes
  • Paraphrase without understanding
  • Import highlights without processing

Always:

  • Transform ideas through your understanding
  • Add your interpretation and context
  • Connect to your existing knowledge

Note Types

Fleeting Notes

Purpose: Quick capture of ideas before they're lost

Characteristics:

  • Temporary (24-48 hour lifespan)
  • Minimal formatting
  • Just enough context to remember
  • Gateway to permanent notes

Workflow:

  1. Capture immediately when idea strikes
  2. Review daily
  3. Either: Transform to permanent note OR discard
  4. Never let them accumulate

Literature Notes

Purpose: Process and capture ideas from sources

Characteristics:

  • One note per source (book, article, video)
  • Ideas in your own words
  • Clear source attribution
  • Bridges to permanent notes

Workflow:

  1. Consume the source
  2. Capture key ideas (in your words)
  3. Note page/timestamp references
  4. Identify potential permanent notes
  5. Create permanent notes from best ideas

Permanent Notes (Zettel)

Purpose: The core of your knowledge base

Characteristics:

  • Atomic (one idea)
  • Autonomous (self-contained)
  • Connected (linked to others)
  • Personal (your understanding)
  • Evergreen (timeless value)

Workflow:

  1. Write the idea clearly
  2. Provide sufficient context
  3. Create meaningful links
  4. Add to relevant MOC
  5. Tag appropriately

Structure Notes / MOCs

Purpose: Navigation and organization

Characteristics:

  • Overview of a topic cluster
  • Entry points for exploration
  • Contextual organization (not alphabetical)
  • Links with brief descriptions

Workflow:

  1. Identify theme/topic cluster
  2. Gather related permanent notes
  3. Organize by subtopic or progression
  4. Add brief context for each link
  5. Include entry points for newcomers

Linking Strategy

When to Link

Link when you can answer why the notes connect:

  • "This supports X because..."
  • "This contradicts Y in that..."
  • "This extends Z by..."
  • "This applies to W when..."

How to Link

Good link: See [[compound-effect]] for why small daily improvements matter

Bad link: Related: [[compound-effect]] (no context)

Link Discovery Questions

Ask yourself:

  1. What does this remind me of?
  2. What would this contradict?
  3. Where might I use this?
  4. What is this similar to?
  5. What would this combine with?

Note Lifecycle

Idea → Fleeting Note → Literature Note* → Permanent Note → MOC Integration
                           ↓
                    (*if from source)

Seedling → Budding → Evergreen

Seedling: New note, rough, few connections Budding: Refined, some connections, needs work Evergreen: Polished, well-connected, complete

Obsidian Implementation

Folder Structure

vault/
├── 0-inbox/          # Fleeting notes land here
├── 1-literature/     # Literature notes
├── 2-permanent/      # Permanent notes (Zettel)
├── 3-moc/            # Maps of Content
├── templates/        # Note templates
└── attachments/      # Images, PDFs

Naming Convention

Timestamp + kebab-case:

202312150930-compound-effect-habits.md
YYYYMMDDHHmm-descriptive-title.md

Benefits:

  • Unique forever
  • Sortable by creation
  • Works as citation ID

Tags vs Links

Use tags for:

  • Status (#seedling, #evergreen)
  • Type (#fleeting, #literature)
  • Source type (#book, #article)
  • Projects (#project/thesis)

Use links for:

  • Conceptual connections
  • Related ideas
  • MOC inclusion
  • Cross-references

Essential Plugins

  • Dataview: Query and display notes
  • Templater: Dynamic templates
  • Graph Analysis: Visualize connections
  • Backlinks: See incoming links
  • Outgoing Links: See outgoing links

Common Mistakes

1. Collector's Fallacy

Problem: Saving without processing Solution: Process or discard within 48h

2. Over-linking

Problem: Linking everything to everything Solution: Only link with clear reason

3. Folder Obsession

Problem: Organizing by topic folders Solution: Let links create structure

4. Quote Hoarding

Problem: Notes full of quotes Solution: Transform to your words

5. Perfectionism

Problem: Waiting for "perfect" note Solution: Start messy, refine over time

Daily Practice

Morning Review (5 min)

  1. Review inbox/fleeting notes
  2. Process or schedule for processing
  3. Check for orphan notes

During Work

  1. Capture ideas immediately
  2. Don't interrupt flow to process
  3. Trust your future self

Evening Processing (15-30 min)

  1. Transform fleeting to permanent
  2. Create links for new notes
  3. Update relevant MOCs
  4. Clean inbox

Weekly Review (30 min)

  1. Review orphan notes
  2. Strengthen weak connections
  3. Update growing MOCs
  4. Archive stale fleeting notes

Reference Files