/MolecularNotes

My Obsidian Second Brain setup

Primary LanguagePythonMIT LicenseMIT

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This repository contains my Obsidian implementation of Molecular Notes – a Second Brain system that I use to organise my thinking. You can read about the philosophy of Molecular Notes here and more about the Obsidian implementation here).

Note: I am not accepting PRs as this repo represents my personal workflow. However, if you have a use case that the current iteration of MolecularNotes doesn't address, it would be awesome if you could create an issue and share the modification you made so that others can get some inspiration!

Basic setup instructions

  1. Install Obsidian and create an Obsidian Vault (a folder to store all your notes). Mine is named ObsidianVault and I put it in my home folder.
  2. Clone this repository into your vault (on GitHub click the green Code button, then Download ZIP, and copy-paste the contents into your vault using Finder or File explorer)
  3. Delete the README.md file.
  4. In Obsidian, go to Settings -> Files & Links -> Default location for new attachments -> _attachments (make this folder if it doesn't exist).
  5. Set up templates:
    1. Settings -> Core plugins -> Templates (switch on).
    2. Settings -> Templates -> Template folder location -> _templates.
    3. (Optional) set hotkey in Settings -> Hotkeys -> Templates: Insert Template -> ⌘T
  6. Check you have the below plugins enabled: Settings -> Core Plugins
  7. (Optional) Change the colour theme to something you like! You can find this in Settings -> Appearance -> Themes

Plugins

These are the core plugins I am using (most are enabled by default):

  • File explorer: duh
  • Search: duh
  • Quick switcher: a very useful way of quickly jumping to a new note: you just press ⌘O then start typing the note name to jump to it.
  • Graph view: duh
  • Backlinks / Outgoing links: duh
  • Tag pane: a helpful way of looking at your tags
  • Page preview: nice syntax
  • Templates: a must
  • Note composer: I have this but I've only used it rarely
  • Command palette: a must
  • Starred: a new-ish plugin that helps you save common searches
  • Markdown format importer: useful in my workflows to paste Notion content into Obsidian
  • Word count: up to you
  • Workspaces: handy! I've saved a note view and a graph view.
  • Sync: optional but I like it

Community plugins:

  • Mind Map: occasionally useful to visualise notes as a mindmap
  • Obsidian git: I like having an extra backup to a private github
  • Tag wrangler: very useful extension for renaming tags

Advanced setup

Make sure you have python 3 installed on your system. The helper script can be run from your Obsidian Vault:

cd ObsidianVault && python _scripts/obsidian_util.py

In my ~/.zshrc I then created an alias for this, such that when I type obsidian into terminal my script runs.

alias obsidian="cd $HOME/ObsidianVault && python _scripts/obsidian_util.py"

The Polymer dashboard (a spaced repetition tool) requires streamlit to be installed (pip install streamlit). It can be run using:

cd ObsidianVault && streamit run _scripts/polymer.py

## Troubleshooting Polymer

If you are having trouble with Polymer, please follow the below steps:

  1. Shut down the dashboard (e.g ctrl-C wherever you ran streamlit run _scripts/polymer.py)
  2. Delete the _scripts/db.json file. Note: this will delete your current flashcard progress
  3. Re-run the dashboard

Organising my Second Brain

The ideas behind this are discussed in the blog posts, but here is a reference.

Folders

  • Underscore folders represent Obsidian internals
  • Topics stores Topic types for faster browsing
  • Sources contains my notes on any information media: books, articles, videos etc
  • Molecules contains my personal observations/ideas/thoughts
  • Authors are Source note authors.
  • Atoms go in the top level

Tags

I use tags to represent "is-a" relations (i.e types)

  • Core types:
    • atom: the base note type for an individual piece of knowledge derived from a source
    • molecule: my own observation – a permanent note
    • topic: used to signify that a note is a category placeholder
    • author: the creator of a piece of content
    • todo: something I need to fill in
    • project: a long-term project
  • Source types:
    • book
    • article: e.g blog post, web article
    • post: social media / forum
    • academic: textbook, journal article
    • video
    • podcast
    • primer (e.g sellside)
    • presentation
    • course
  • Atom types:
    • tool: something that I can use to solve a problem
    • cognitive-bias
    • framework: a way of thinking about the world
    • school-of-thought: a historical school of thought
    • theorem: a mathematical law
    • person: someone of note
    • event: a historical event
    • amusing: a popular saying, aphorism, "law"
    • heuristic: a "common wisdom" way of doing something
    • trading-strat: a trading strategy
    • instrument: a financial instrument