Automated commit at Sat Jun 1 18:30:01 CEST 2024

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Mischa van den Burg 2024-06-01 18:30:01 +02:00
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@ -3,6 +3,10 @@ Luhmann used Maps of Content! They are referred to as indexes in the book. The M
The index of the Zettelkasten is very insightful in how he created structure and divided things up in subtopics.
The picture you see is from the digital version of Luhmann's Zettelkasten. What you see here is part of the Index that Luhman actually used. This is a list of the entry notes which I was just talking about.
When he needed to look up a certain topic, he would use his index to find the entry point to his chain of thoughts, and then navigate further from there.
## Links:
[Inhaltsübersicht ZK II - Niklas Luhmann-Archiv (niklas-luhmann-archiv.de)](https://niklas-luhmann-archiv.de/bestand/zettelkasten/inhaltsuebersicht#ZK_2_editor_I_9)

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@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ Welcome. I've been keeping a Zettelkasten for about 3 years now, and I've accumu
Publishing my writing to the world started with my [tech blog](https://mischavandenburg.com). I wrote about my journey into DevOps and what I was learning along the way, and found it to be an enjoyable practice. Later I approached it more like a Zettelkasten too, including personal notes and writing about my non-technical hobbies and obsessions. But eventually I felt it was better to keep it more accessible and readable for people interested in reading my technical content and for recruiters and hiring managers to have a good browsing experience.
Quartz seems like a fun way to publish my personal Zettelkasten to the world. I think the publication aspect will help me to keep a more strict Zettelkasten methodology. My notetaking system has always been based on Niklas Luhmann's method of Zettelkasten, but after recently re-reading [How to Take Smart Notes](https://amzn.to/49Pcimg) I realized I had drifted farther than I liked. Publishing my Zettels will also force me to start keeping an index or maintaining Maps of Content, because they will be the only way to provide some useful initial structure to the reader. I don't really need them for my own notetaking and retrieval experience, but Luhmann kept elaborate indexes of his Zettelkasten, mainly because he didn't have the luxury of digital search like I have. (See [[How Luhmann Organized his Zettelkasten]])
Quartz seems like a fun way to publish my personal Zettelkasten to the world. I think the publication aspect will help me to keep a more strict Zettelkasten methodology. My notetaking system has always been based on Niklas Luhmann's method of Zettelkasten, but after recently re-reading [How to Take Smart Notes](https://amzn.to/49Pcimg) I realized I had drifted farther than I liked. Publishing my Zettels will also force me to start keeping an index or maintaining Maps of Content, because they will be the only way to provide some useful initial structure to the reader. I don't really need them for my own notetaking and retrieval experience, but Luhmann kept elaborate indexes of his Zettelkasten, mainly because he didn't have the luxury of digital search like I have. (See [[Luhmann used and index simllar to Maps of Content]])
However, if you are interesed in following me I suggest you [add this website to your preferred RSS reader ](https://zettelkasten.mischavandenburg.net/index.xml) instead so you get regular updates. That's how I follow the people I'm most interested in.