This page gives the graph room to function as an instrument rather than an ornament. It is best read as a map of adjacency: a way of seeing which notes cluster together, which concepts bridge distant regions, and where the archive is still thin.
How to Read the Map
- dense clusters usually indicate a sustained line of study
- isolated notes often mark beginnings, fragments, or unfinished branches
- links matter more than volume; a small note can still connect two large domains
Use
The graph is most useful when used together with the topic pages, the lexicon, and ordinary note-to-note reading. It does not replace the structure of the notebook, but makes that structure visible from above.