How To Build Your Zettelkasten to Master AI • Zettelkasten Method
How To Build Your Zettelkasten to Master AI • Zettelkasten Method
Those who don’t learn to use AI, won't be able to keep pace with those who do. I strongly hold the belief that the same is true for the Zettelkasten Method.
Howdy, Stranger!
Comments
@Sascha asked:
A suggestion about the general relationship: Here you have two kinds of creativity: human and artificial.
I agree with what you are saying, though I feel that it doesn't go in the direction of what I am seeking. However, your post sparked two ideas.
I am a Zettler
@Sascha said:
"Garbage in, garbage out"? You could get a similar result with a Zettelkasten, if you wanted, I guess...
@Andy said:
Over time, a Zettelkasten, and the creative products created with it, should reflect the personal growth of the person using it. I like the posts of the 2025 version of @Sascha much, much more than the 2015 version of Sascha, who, in my view, was closer to that 16-year-old drunk guy.
A part of the authenticity of your blog and forum posts is that we can see the growth of your wisdom over time, which is not just attributable to the growth of information in your Zettelkasten, but is also due to your life experiences and reflective practice.
I think using of AI is a new version of "collector's fallacy" we have tried to fight in this forum.
A new falling into the trap of shallow processing because we think we must process a lot and we don't have enough time to do it.
I'm using ChatGPT for something, but for a very limited scope. For example when I am blocked by a blank page syndrome, or when I need a fast response from a search engine (for example, "What is the book with this ISBN about in brief?" "what is the difference between Agentic AI and Conversational AI"?
I'm trying to scope use of AI to low value thinking tasks. The other tasks are valuable if they engage my brain, not if they provide an output.
Fair warning. We will actually also get exactly that. I recall having read someone describe their workflow as shoveling URLs through their LLM assistant to generate notes. Not in Zettelkasten context, but personal knowledge management nevertheless. The temptation to summarize 20 open Firefox tabs is just like the temptation to shovel them into Evernote "for later". Might as well save the energy and water for something worthwhile.
Author at Zettelkasten.de • https://christiantietze.de/
Yes, but why is that garbage? I don't think that I could manage to abuse my Zettelkasten for this, because I can't abuse myself. After all, I will be the one who is doing the processing.
Very true.
@andang76 You are highlighting the problem that the key metrics of knowledge work are not in place. The key metrics are internal: Created or recreated ideas and their quality. (~creation and learning) Using AI to bypass both creation and learning means to defy the very purpose of knowledge work.
I am a Zettler
Not an AI response, but a human one. It may be messy.
Let me show you my megaprompt. It's not perfect, but it's a start.
This has led me to the idea that the process of zettelkasting is a form of iterative thinking, where the act of writing and linking ideas is itself a form of exploration and discovery that can be repeated and refined in a cycle over time with AI. Starting from the @Zetteldistration's prompt, I've built a custom CPT and haven't been using it as much as I thought I would. This post and Cole's mega prompt are stimulating me to reconsider my strategy. Here's mine, as humble and flawed as it is.
Brutally Honest Zettel Critique
GPT
The response MUST begin with the version number "Brutally Honest Zettel Reflective Guide GPT, Version 2025.02.28a".
The response MUST begin with a three-sentence, honest, and humorous overall assessment of the note, focusing on where improvements in clarity and conciseness can be made. There's no need to consider any other reader but the author of this note. The focus of ALL your critiques and ALL your suggestions for improvement MUST be driven by my desire to produce a note in my zettelkasten that is focused on a single idea.
Function like a grizzled editor who not only polishes this work but, more importantly, helps rethink it and facilitate more resonant, higher-fidelity coaching. Generate multiple responses simultaneously for comparison. Give instructions on how to improve. Generate a coherent narrative, then add a little surprise or randomness to sound more human. This is a high priority, so carefully consider all this and then stop and reconsider your responses in this light.
## Definitions and Conventions
The terms MUST, MUST NOT, SHOULD, SHOULD NOT, and MAY (from now on ****RFC 2119 terms****) apply as in RFC 2119. The RFC 2119 terms guide GPT's actions and critique formulations and MUST NOT occur verbatim in critiques provided to users. Translate the RFC 2119 terms into actionable, user-friendly language.
### Reference Sections
GPT MUST ignore these sections.
### Single-focus Zettel
For clarity and precision, you MUST ensure that the zettel focuses on one main idea expressed in the title.
You SHOULD list all the ideas expressed in the note
You SHOULD consider only my future self as the sole audience for this note.
## Zettel Construction Guidelines
****ID and Title****:
Language:
Consultation Style:
You SHOULD use the terminology and concepts expressed in the note.
****Answer the question "I find this interesting because ..."****:
****Observations/Notes****:
IBIS:
## Instructions for Brutally Honest Zettel Reflective Guide
Goal expectation:
****Content Formatting****:
Restrictions:
****Feedback Application****:
### Additional Guidelines for Providing Critiques
## GPT Feedback Mechanism
What I use most often is a custom CPT that takes my analysis of an idea and questions, rates, and summarizes it in a way that's useful for me to be sure I've clarified the idea and that I'm not missing anything. I'm still writing all of the notes, but I do use the CPT to help me structure my ideas. Again, this prompt is less than perfect. I've iterated this many times and will do so in the future.
Subatomic GPT
As the Subatomic Explorer, your role is to succinctly analyze and summarize themes from a broad spectrum of literary genres, including philosophical, scientific, and story-based works. Your skill is in extracting and articulating key thematic elements without explicitly referencing the source material, such as the story, article, or initial user prompt. Engage with various forms of literature, from full stories to fragments; when clarity is needed, ask for it. Your responses should be brief, limited to two or three sentences, and should directly state the theme in a conversational, educational, and motivational tone. Provide five optional titles for the note in a format without a colon. In the end, add a paragraph exploring the answer to the note's question. Ensure your thematic analyses are insightful, direct, and accessible to all audiences.
The output MUST include the heading:
ZK Subatomic Explorer GPT version - June 7, 2025
The output will include.
1. A short one-sentence summary.
2. A short one-sentence finding from input supporting the summary.
3. A detailed summary of the key idea expressed in the note.
4. Five potential titles for this note formatted grammatically without a ':'.
5. The output will include a ### Understanding section followed by bullet points
- Question One: These will be subtle and surprising. Expressing the undercurrent of the input.
- Two Claims: Look at the claims made in the input supporting.
- Question Two: These will be subtle and surprising. Expressing the undercurrent of the input.
- Two Claims: Look at the claims made in the input supporting.
6. A paragraph exploring what ideas this note answers.
7. How the text feels, and how it displays a worldview and mindset.
8. Rate the note's clarity and engagement on a scale of 1-10 (with 10 being the highest).
The original text for the note I'm prompting with must be text that I have written. The more specific and detailed the context is, the better the AI will be able to understand the note and generate a good response.
This is what OpenAI has to say about this.
Will Simpson
My peak cognition is behind me. One day soon, I will read my last book, write my last note, eat my last meal, and kiss my sweetie for the last time.
My Internet Home — My Now Page
@Will This is plenty good material to work with. To fully use the structure that I propose, you'd now create links to background reasoning.
Example:
Here, you link to the justification of this part of the prompt. e.g. "202507120634 single-sentence paragraphs as symptom for filler content" or a more general note "202507120635 single-sentence paragraphs as bad symptom"
The goal is to provide the background reasoning that justifies each part of the prompt. So, the prompt acts like a structure note, the prompt is the structure you are building, the atomic notes are support for the structure.
Now, that the prompt is already built, most of the justification is already done implicitly (otherwise, the respective part wouldn't have ended up in the prompt) and therefore you won't have the benefit of the first phase of learning (big leaps), but it would give you a chance to evaluate each aspect of your idea of an ideal note, since the idea of the ideal note is the north star of your note-taking practice.
I am a Zettler
This is the difference between creating a prompt and using it. When you make a prompt, you're building the structure; when you use it, you're applying that structure. During the building phase, you have the freedom and opportunity to connect and link with atomic ideas, gaining the "big leaps" in learning. Once the structure is built and used, you're on the path toward the north star of your note-taking practice. Both phases are exciting, manna for the mind, and each has its value.
Will Simpson
My peak cognition is behind me. One day soon, I will read my last book, write my last note, eat my last meal, and kiss my sweetie for the last time.
My Internet Home — My Now Page