Question
What is connected notes?
Quick Answer
Each atom exists in relationship to others — atomicity is about self-containment not loneliness.
Connected notes is a concept in personal epistemology: Each atom exists in relationship to others — atomicity is about self-containment not loneliness.
Example: You have 200 atomic notes, each holding one idea. They sit in a flat list. None link to any other. When you search for 'decision-making under uncertainty,' one note surfaces — but you cannot see the five related notes on cognitive biases, risk tolerance, expected value, sunk cost reasoning, and reversibility of decisions that would turn that single retrieval into a usable argument. The notes are atomic, but they are also inert. Now add links between them. The same search surfaces one note, but you follow a connection to cognitive biases, then to sunk cost reasoning, then to reversibility — and in sixty seconds you have reassembled an argument that would have taken thirty minutes to reconstruct from memory. The atoms did not change. The connections made them alive.
This concept is part of Phase 2 (Atomicity and Decomposition) in the How to Think curriculum, which builds the epistemic infrastructure for atomicity and decomposition.
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