Building a Second Brain
Methods and systems for capturing, organizing, and connecting what you learn
- Capture practices — what to save and how
Effective capture means curating rather than hoarding: using resonance as the filter, read-later apps to defer consumption, and a small set of capture tools to funnel everything into one centralized place.
4sourcesupdated 1 week ago - Building a Second Brain (BASB) — core premise and CODE framework
BASB is a personal knowledge management system built on the premise that the brain is for generating ideas, not storing them, and that an external digital system should handle capture, organization, distillation, and expression of knowledge.
4sourcesupdated 1 week ago - Zettelkasten Method
The Zettelkasten is a personal thinking and writing system built on a hypertext of atomic, linked notes — emphasizing connection over collection — pioneered by sociologist Niklas Luhmann and well-suited to researchers and writers building knowledge that compounds over years.
3sourcesupdated 1 week ago - PARA Method — organizing by actionability
PARA organizes all digital information into four categories — Projects, Areas, Resources, Archives — based on actionability rather than topic, making the same filing structure work across every app and every area of life.
2sourcesupdated 1 week ago - Progressive Summarization
Progressive Summarization is Tiago Forte's technique for distilling notes across multiple encounters through layered highlighting, producing notes that future-you can scan in seconds rather than re-read in full.
2sourcesupdated 1 week ago - Intermediate Packets — reusable units of work
Intermediate Packets are small, self-contained, reusable units of work — summaries, slide templates, curated lists, well-crafted paragraphs — stored in the second brain so that future projects can be assembled from existing pieces rather than rebuilt from scratch.
2sourcesupdated 1 week ago - Tools for thought — vision and philosophy
Tools for thought are systems that genuinely expand the range of thoughts humans can think — like writing or Hindu-Arabic numerals — and developing the next generation requires an insight-through-making loop combining deep research with serious creative work, not conventional product practice alone.
1sourceupdated 1 week ago - Mnemonic medium and spaced repetition
The mnemonic medium embeds spaced-repetition flashcards inside narrative essays, making memory a reliable choice rather than a chance event, and early evidence from Quantum Country suggests it can support genuine conceptual understanding — not just rote recall — at low time cost.
1sourceupdated 1 week ago