Zettelkasten

A living archive of interconnected ideas. Notes that evolve, connect, and compound over time

The German word Zettelkasten translates to “slip box,” but it’s really a philosophy about how knowledge grows.

In the 20th century, sociologist Niklas Luhmann filled wooden boxes with thousands of index cards, each containing a single idea. But here’s the magic: every card was linked to others through a simple numbering system. Over decades, these connections compounded into a vast web of thought that produced 70 books and 400+ scholarly articles.

I’ve adapted this system for the digital age. Instead of index cards, I maintain living notes. Documents that evolve as I learn, research, and encounter new insights. Topics connect. Ideas compound. Understanding deepens.

This is my Zettelkasten: a growing archive of interconnected thoughts on sound, perception, data, and the messy process of making sense of it all.


📚 Living Books

Comprehensive, book-length guides that grow over time. These are deep dives into topics I’m actively researching and refining.


📝 Living Notes

Shorter, focused notes on specific topics. Quick references, frameworks, and insights that I refine as I learn more.


These documents are never "finished." They evolve as my understanding deepens, connections emerge, and new insights arrive.