I’m much better at writing new stuff than consolidating the old, but it’s time to review what’s been posted here during 2025. Short posts excluded, it’s quite a lot, considering I’m Writing Slowly.

People

Roland Barthes on the purpose of writing notes

The Dance of Joyful Knowledge: Inside Georges Didi-Huberman’s Monumental Note Archive

Lord Acton took too many notes, but that doesn’t mean you have to

Leibniz created a haystack of notes that wouldn’t fit in his Zettelschrank

What Tim Berners-Lee Has to Teach About Effective Notes

Daniel Wisser’s notecards as art and archive

A search for meaning in the palace of lost memories: Thoughts on Piranesi, a novel by Susanna Clarke

What I Learned from Bob Doto about Making Effective Notes and Writing a Book

I’m unqualified to diagnose the following writers with ADHD but I’ll do it anyway

Mastering Any Skill, the Japanese Way. A review of Analysis of Shu Ha Ri in Karate-Do: When a Martial Art Becomes a Fine Art by Hermann Bayer, Ph.D.


Writing and Making notes

Maybe you can create coherent writing from a pile of notes after all

Semantic line breaks are a feature of Markdown, not a bug

Create a note system that indexes itself

Publishing Slowly. An article about my first book launch of the year.

My writing process oscillates between notes and drafts

Roland Barthes on the purpose of writing notes

The Dance of Joyful Knowledge: Inside Georges Didi-Huberman’s Monumental Note Archive

Lord Acton took too many notes, but that doesn’t mean you have to

Tame the chaos with just foour folders for all your notes

Five solutions to link rot in my personal note collection

Why not publish all your notes online?

From tiny drops of writing, great rivers will flow

I found a way to create order from my jumbled ideas

Leibniz created a haystack of notes that wouldn’t fit in his Zettelschrank

What Tim Berners-Lee Has to Teach About Effective Notes

Daniel Wisser’s notecards as art and archive

What I’ve learned from non-linear narratives

A search for meaning in the palace of lost memories: Thoughts on Piranesi, a novel by Susanna Clarke

What I Learned from Bob Doto about Making Effective Notes and Writing a Book

What to do when you’ve made some notes: Start writing

Don’t throw away your old notes

Don’t let your note-making system infect you with Archive Fever

I’m unqualified to diagnose the following writers with ADHD but I’ll do it anyway

I designed a book in three and a half hours

If there’s more than one way of seeing, there’s more than one way of organising

Watch in awe as a fleeting thought becomes a lasting note

Plenty of ways to write online

Open, free and poetic. The Web is 34 years old!

Is there a Zettelkasten method?

Use case for the Zettelkasten. Why use a Zettelkasten? Why indeed?

Back to the Information City? How knowledge visualisation shapes the journey

Zettelkasten podcast episodes

Keeping a diary is a way of living

Publishing means no more hiding. Publishing my book, I had the strange feeling of having crossed an invisible but very powerful threshold.

Create your own mental models

Why niche blogs and Small Rooms still win - even in the age of technofeudalism

Imitating the greats? Imitation can be a very effective form of learning, but it’s worth considering who to imitate, and how.

Trying to write slowly in 2025

The Unity of Pen and Sword: Understanding Bunbu Ichi


Learning

The future of the humanities is wide open

Influence is everything: novelty its flimsy dress. What happens when once fashionable ideas get left behind?

I designed a book in three and a half hours

Mastering Any Skill, the Japanese Way. A review of Analysis of Shu Ha Ri in Karate-Do: When a Martial Art Becomes a Fine Art by Hermann Bayer, Ph.D.

Back to the Information City? How knowledge visualisation shapes the journey

Curious about Hypercuriosity

Create your own mental models

Imitating the greats? Imitation can be a very effective form of learning, but it’s worth considering who to imitate, and how.

What does it mean to transcend the rules?

Keeping a diary is a way of living

Japanese Shu Ha Ri: Is it Better Than Western Learning Methods?

There’s a fundamental flaw in how we learn about expertise

Shu Ha Ri and the philosophy of interior design

The Unity of Pen and Sword: Understanding Bunbu Ichi


AI

What comes after content?

It’s a great time to be writing the future

To understand the future of AI, look to the past

Leibniz created a haystack of notes that wouldn’t fit in his Zettelschrank

Hot takes on our future with AI

Provocative words about learning, teaching, AI, and the timely value of history

There’s a fundamental flaw in how we learn about expertise


Other

The Sydney I know isn’t like what they’re showing on the news

Japanese paper films. Yes, in the 1930s the Japanese made a whole bunch of short movies using rolls of paper instead of celluloid.

Check out my book, Shu Ha Ri: The Japanese Way of Learning, for Artists and Fighters. And you can also subscribe to the weekly Writing Slowly email newsletter.