Knowledge graph
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These notes are made up of nested blocks (i.e. bullet points). You can access a block directly by clicking the arrow on the right side of the block. In theory, this coulud be a way to link between different people’s notes (i.e. Knowledge Graphs), and have direct access to the block hierarchy in published notes the same way one does in Logseq. Long-term, I hope to use this system to add more semantic meaning to the linked connections between notes, and explore the possible ramifications of surfacing their underlying categorical structure.
There is a nod here to Category Theory. I’m not yet sure what to make of it, but I have a desire to make a note-taking language that can essentially be the language of Category Theory. If ever achieved, then, in theory, anything that can be represented by a Category can be represented as Knowledge graph of notes.
There is a nod here to Category Theory. I’m not yet sure what to make of it, but I have a desire to make a note-taking language that can essentially be the language of Category Theory. If ever achieved, then, in theory, anything that can be represented by a Category can be represented as Knowledge graph of notes.
These notes are made up of nested blocks (i.e. bullet points). You can access a block directly by clicking the arrow on the right side of the block. In theory, this coulud be a way to link between different people’s notes (i.e. Knowledge Graphs), and have direct access to the block hierarchy in published notes the same way one does in Logseq. Long-term, I hope to use this system to add more semantic meaning to the linked connections between notes, and explore the possible ramifications of surfacing their underlying categorical structure.
This prototypes a possible way to link between different people’s knowledge graphs using the familiar structure of URLs. This relates to the idea of a World Knowledge Graph, and I discuss it more in my post on How Logseq should build a World Knowledge Graph.