@bimlas

I agree with David the Ahrens is useful. Also, in your case, the writer has 
a decent grasp of Zettlekasten, as well as changes some software has made 
to the original Luhrman approach.

bimlas wrote:
>
>
> Are there any books that are definitely worth reading if I want to create 
> a really good knowledge base?
>

An issue with *all* the literature around software I have read so far is 
that it tends to focus on technical means too much.
The fact is that use of software in the way you want/need is ultimately 
based in a *cognitive* need. 
You know what you want but need work at how to achieve it. 
Using/building tools is a creative act of "meaning making" dependent on 
task ("function").

So, as far as books go, I'd look took a *little bit *at general works on 
"meaning making" & "creative process" too. Not for solutions as such; but 
to aid perspective. Like: Gene Gendlin (e.g. Experiencing & The Creation Of 
Meaning), Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi (e.g. Flow), Edward de Bono (e.g. Serious 
Creativity), Brewster Ghiselin (editor of The Creative Process). A bit of 
any of that stuff might help.

Longer term I think that "open tools" like TW, that are ultimately agnostic 
on link "philosophy", that permit many enabling modes of linking, will 
clarify what good praxis looks like for specific aims. Hopefully, your & 
David's approaches could help show some of these more clearly. Folk working 
FOR a purpose using a tool that helps.

Best wishes
TT

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