Notes
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Fleeting notes These are notes that come to you in the moment, on the fly. Write them down and file them away later.
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Literature notes Write down notes about the contents of what you read, what you think the piece is saying, and a selective amount of quotes. Literature notes should also come with bibliographical information if necessary.
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Permanent notes These are the refined notes that go into the slip-box. The above two forms are mostly fleeting notes. You (I) should go through the notes I take daily and organize them into permanent notes. This stage is not for collecting ideas (that's 1 and 2) it's to develop the ideas you've already written down. Each note should have its own idea and should be expressed as though being written for someone else.
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File the permanent note
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Associate it with similar notes Make links and back-links to it
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The rest of the steps discussed in chapter 2.1 are omitted, as they can be summarized as:
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To start writing a paper, find a topic on something you've taken notes on
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Interpret your notes to make an argument
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Write a rough draft, proofread, and submit
- public document at doc.anagora.org/20200712110047-zettelkasten_note_taking_process
- video call at meet.jit.si/20200712110047-zettelkasten_note_taking_process