Question
How do I practice emergent structure?
Quick Answer
Pick a topic you've been thinking about for weeks. Gather every atomic note you have on it — even tangential ones. Spread them out (physically or digitally) and start arranging them into a linear sequence. Don't force an outline. Move the atoms around until you find an order that produces a 'train.
The most direct way to practice emergent structure is through a focused exercise: Pick a topic you've been thinking about for weeks. Gather every atomic note you have on it — even tangential ones. Spread them out (physically or digitally) and start arranging them into a linear sequence. Don't force an outline. Move the atoms around until you find an order that produces a 'train of thought' — where each note leads naturally to the next. Write down the sequence. You now have the skeleton of an argument you discovered rather than designed.
Common pitfall: Trying to plan the sequence before you have the atoms. You sit down to write 'a piece about decision-making' and open a blank document with an outline. The outline feels right for about 20 minutes, then you get stuck because the structure came from your head, not from accumulated material. The fix: collect atoms first, sequence second.
This practice connects to Phase 2 (Atomicity and Decomposition) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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