What is this?
what is this?
What is an external brain?
- A system that performs some of the functions of the brain outside of the living brain
- This improves the intellectual and productive capacity of the system as a whole, including the living brain
- Thinking does not take place only in the brain.
- Memory and associative stock
- Fragments of units finer than books and articles
- The information card introduced by Tadao Umesao in The Art of Intellectual Production is used by writers to stockpile fragments in units smaller than a book before writing.
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- Not only him, but many authors have used similar mechanisms, e.g., zetterkasten.
- Once it was written on paper and placed in a private study.
- It was not a final work, but to assist the person in the intellectual production of the work at the stage of creating it.
- So only he could see it.
- A small portion was published in fragments in the form of posthumous arrangement of manuscripts, etc.: fragmentary writing.
- This could be interpreted as an information card that Yasukazu Nishio uses for his own intellectual production.
- As of 2024, there are 2,000 cards.
- [Information should be made public unless there is a reason not to make it public.
- Compared to paper cards, there are advantages to being digital
- A system that makes it easy to create and follow links between fragments
- The links between thoughts are suggestion and derailment.
- It makes sense that this is not done only in the brain, but externalized as stock of associations.
- If you externalize it instead of keeping it in the brain, external mechanisms such as computers can interact with it.
- We believe this is important in the context of future LLM development.
What is Scrapbox/Cosense?
- Web services we started using in 2017
- Well-thought-out specifications significantly facilitated the development of Yasukazu Nishio's external brain
Guide for New Scrapbox Readers
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The best way to understand Scrapbox is to use Scrapbox yourself
- I've written a lot of verbal explanations here Increased skill in using tools leads to a more detailed perception of the world, so the understanding of those who don't use them doesn't lead to those who do.
- As a function of Scrapbox, when you search within your own Scrapbox project, a cross search is also performed against the Scrapbox projects you have viewed, giving you the opportunity to discover other people's ideas about what you are thinking.
- Since this service is focused on "growing your network of knowledge", it is best to try to grow your own network of knowledge
Meaning of the color of the links in the page
- Red links are "doors that don't lead anywhere yet" and therefore not useful to click on.
- Think of it as highlighting keywords.
- Blue links are links to other pages in Scrapbox
- This page can be EMPTY.
- empty is also useful because it displays a card at the bottom of the page with a list of "pages linked to that keyword".
- Example: [Philosophy of /shokai/Scrapbox]
- This is a link to Scrapbox's "Other Projects" page
- This example links to a page in the shokai project that is developing Scrapbox
- For English reader, currently auto-translation supports only in this project. Links to other Japanese project may broken because of translation of title.
- Blue underlined links are links outside Scrapbox
Meaning of the green and gray lines on the left edge of the page
- They are called "telomeres." For a detailed description, see /shokai/telomere.
- Unread lines (= lines that have been updated since the last visit) are green
- The more recently updated, the thicker.
- Click here to get the permalink to the line so you can mention it.
Q: Where do I start reading?
- Option 1: Search for keywords of your interest
- Option 2: Follow the links by clicking on the links that interest you at the bottom of each page.
About Quotations and Licenses
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- Anything published can be cited.
- We think it is a very good thing to cite, mention and develop
- We believe that it is a bad idea to make it difficult to utilize information because it is not clear who inherits the rights upon the death of the copyright holder
- The information on this Scrapbox is licensed under a CC-BY license upon the death of NISHIO Hirokazu
This page is auto-translated from /nishio/これは何? using DeepL. If you looks something interesting but the auto-translated English is not good enough to understand it, feel free to let me know at @nishio_en. I'm very happy to spread my thought to non-Japanese readers.