Question
How do I practice knowledge graph?
Quick Answer
Take five concepts you have been thinking about recently — from any domain. Write each one on a separate card or line. Now draw connections between them: which supports which? Which contradicts which? Which enables or extends another? Label each connection. You now have a five-node knowledge.
The most direct way to practice knowledge graph is through a focused exercise: Take five concepts you have been thinking about recently — from any domain. Write each one on a separate card or line. Now draw connections between them: which supports which? Which contradicts which? Which enables or extends another? Label each connection. You now have a five-node knowledge graph. Notice what becomes visible when you see the structure that was previously implicit.
Common pitfall: Treating the graph as the knowledge itself. The graph is a map, not the territory. You can build an elaborate, beautifully connected knowledge graph and still not understand the material it represents. The danger is spending more time maintaining the graph than engaging with the ideas. A graph with a thousand nodes and no depth of understanding at any node is a filing system pretending to be cognition. The structure serves the thinking. The thinking does not serve the structure.
This practice connects to Phase 18 (Knowledge Graphs) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
Learn more in these lessons