1,790 Matching Annotations
  1. Apr 2023
    1. Bild 476

      1609

      Georg Merbitz, 80

      Christoph Reiche, 80

    2. Bild 489

      1617

      05.11. Blasius Merbitz, 61

      21.12. Georg Pitzsch, 38

      Martha Patz, 68

    3. Bild 496

      1622

      21.07. Katharina, Barthel Franz, 79

      16.08. Anna, Gregor Faust, 59

      Martin Gladewitz, 50

    4. Bild 535

      1637

      28.07. Anna, Hans Ehlig, 70

      02.08. Georg Fickler

      Barbara Köhler, 53

      Barbara Gladewitz, 60

    1. Bild 250

      1675

      Gertraut Meißner, 67

    2. Bild 172

      1640

      Martin Meißner

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      Andreas Jentzsch

    4. Bild 376

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      Martin Jentzsch, 78

    5. Bild 402

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      Regina Jentzsch, 80

    6. Bild 296

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      Martin Jentzsch, 32

    7. Bild 214

      1660

      Maria Nietzsche

    8. Bild 189

      1648

      Johannes Nietzsche, 66

    9. Bild 334

      1693

      Maria Pretzschel, 68

    10. Bild 310

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      Johannes Pretzschel, 67

    11. Bild 193

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      Anna Matthes

    12. Bild 337

      1695

      Maria Nietzsche, 74

    13. Bild 324

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      Martin Nietzsche, 73

    14. Bild 166

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      Magdalena Nietzsche

    15. Bild 399

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      Johannes Nietzsche, 38

    16. Bild 492

      1751

      Martin Schmidt, 58

    17. Bild 369

      1705

      Hans Kreyser

    1. Bild 251

      1654

      Magdalena Berger

      1655

      Walpurg Marx, 77

    1. Bild 112

      1726

      Adam Neider, 68

      1727

      Georg Ritter, 80

    2. Bild 95

      1720

      Margaretha Hörig, 76

    3. Bild 188

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      Christina Hörig, 61

    4. Bild 174

      1749

      Peter Hörig, 68

    5. Bild 107

      1725

      Caspar Schmidt, 80

    6. Bild 99

      1722

      Regina Schmidt, 77

    7. Bild 114

      1727

      Margaretha Ritter, 74

    1. Bild 418

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      Johanna Sophia Hiekel

    2. Bild 402

      1812

      Christian Gottlob Hiekel, 77

    1. Bild 204

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      Johanna Sophie Hiekel, 65

    2. Bild 191

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      Carl Friedrich Hiekel, 63

    1. Bild 190

      1618

      Johannes Scheunpflug, 62

    2. Bild 171

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      Justina Scheunpflug, 52

    3. Bild 140

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      Caspar Schneider, 65

    4. Bild 172

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      Barbara Schab, 36

    5. Bild 210

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      Stephan Hempel, 86

    6. Bild 200

      1625

      Melchior Schab, 68

      Katharina Schab, 62

    1. Bild 144

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      Anna Wagner, 65

    2. Bild 149

      1665

      Christoph Wagner, 92

    3. Bild 160

      1676

      Christoph Schab, 91

      Maria Schneider, 72

      Christoph Wagner, 39

    4. Bild 146

      1654

      Christina Schneider, 76

      1656

      Katharina Reifland, 43

    5. Bild 148

      1660

      Nicol Reifland, 60

    1. Bild 61

      1673

      Christoph Zämbrich

    2. Bild 164

      1700

      Christoph Zämbrich, 74

    3. Bild 69

      1687

      Michael Zämbrich, 69

    4. Bild 70

      1693

      Anna Zämbrich, 63

    5. Bild 60

      1670

      Bartholomeus Türsche, 79

    1. Bild 242

      1734

      Christoph Stiel

      Christoph Zämbrich, 57

    1. Bild 78

      1715

      Christoph Zämbrich, 66

    2. Bild 53

      1687

      Elisabeth Stiel, 50

      1688

      Christoph Stiel, 31

      1689

      Melchior Glöckner, 66

    3. Bild 44

      1674

      Barbara Lippmann, 69

    4. Bild 54

      1689

      Dorothea Stiel, 35

      Anna Stiel, 78

      Christoph Stiel, 72

      Elisabeth Lippe Fischer, 59

    5. Bild 87

      1726

      Christoph Stiel

    6. Bild 45

      1676

      Elisabeth Grießbach, 62

    7. Bild 41

      1669

      Michael Grießbach, 63

    8. Bild 56

      1692

      Agnes Stiel

      1693

      Paul Stiel, 86

      1694

      Christoph Stiel, 58

    9. Bild 67

      1703

      Maria Stiel, 37

    1. Bild 204

      1715

      Maria Türsche, 75

    2. Bild 200

      1712

      Johann Schab, 72

      1713

      Friedrich Türsche, 67

    3. Bild 183

      1704

      Johann Schneider, 90

    4. Bild 195

      1710

      Susanna Schab, 67

    1. Bild 4

      1726

      Justina Schneider, 85

    2. Bild 47

      1754

      Johann Christoph Schneider, 76

    3. Bild 35

      1746

      Anna Rosina Schneider, 70

    4. Bild 64

      1762

      Elisabeth Schab, 79

    5. Bild 32

      1743

      Johann Christian Schab, 63

    6. Bild 144

      1790

      Maria Sophia Schab, 73

    7. Bild 115

      1780

      Johann Christoph Schab, 70

    8. Bild 43

      1751

      Christoph Meyer, 77

    9. Bild 39

      1751

      Anna Sophia Meyer, 69

    10. Bild 146

      1791

      Johann Heinrich Meyer, 82

    1. Bild 287

      1831

      Johanna Beate Meyer, 79

    2. Bild 264

      1824

      Johann Gotthold Meyer, 77

  2. Feb 2023
    1. A Zettelkasten becomes uninteresting when 1) It does not grow, 2) it grows only with isolated notes, 3) it never produces an output.

      Factors that will cause one to lose interest in the maintenance of their card index...

    1. Bild 387

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      Samuel Klotzsche, 0

    2. Bild 365

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      Anna Elisabeth Klotzsche, 0

    3. Bild 345

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      Martin Klotzsche, 69

    1. Conservative estimates suggest thatthe failure of timely contact tracing due to the data glitch is associated withmore than 125,000 additional infections and over 1,500 additional COVID-19-related death
    2. Our most conservative point estimates imply that the data glitch isdirectly associated more than 120,000 additional infections and over 1,500 addi-tional COVID-19-related deaths

      The results from using the old version of Microsoft Excel.

  3. Jan 2023
    1. Note 9/8j says - "There is a note in the Zettelkasten that contains the argument that refutes the claims on every other note. But this note disappears as soon as one opens the Zettelkasten. I.e. it appropriates a different number, changes position (or: disguises itself) and is then not to be found. A joker." Is he talking about some hypothetical note? What did he mean by disappearing? Can someone please shed some light on what he really meant?

      On the Jokerzettel

      9/8j Im Zettelkasten ist ein Zettel, der das Argument enthält, das die Behauptungen auf allen anderen Zetteln widerlegt.

      Aber dieser Zettel verschwindet, sobald man den Zettelkasten aufzieht.

      D.h. er nimmt eine andere Nummer an, verstellt sich und ist dann nicht zu finden.

      Ein Joker.

      —Niklas Luhmann, ZK II: Zettel 9/8j

      Translation:

      9/8j In the slip box is a slip containing the argument that refutes the claims on all the other slips. But this slip disappears as soon as you open the slip box. That is, he assumes a different number, disguises himself and then cannot be found. A joker.

      Many have asked about the meaning of this jokerzettel over the past several years. Here's my slightly extended interpretation, based on my own practice with thousands of cards, about what Luhmann meant:

      Imagine you've spent your life making and collecting notes and ideas and placing them lovingly on index cards. You've made tens of thousands and they're a major part of your daily workflow and support your life's work. They define you and how you think. You agree with Friedrich Nietzsche's concession to Heinrich Köselitz that “You are right — our writing tools take part in the forming of our thoughts.” Your time is alive with McLuhan's idea that "The medium is the message." or in which his friend John Culkin said, "We shape our tools and thereafter they shape us."

      Eventually you're going to worry about accidentally throwing your cards away, people stealing or copying them, fires (oh! the fires), floods, or other natural disasters. You don't have the ability to do digital back ups yet. You ask yourself, can I truly trust my spouse not to destroy them?,What about accidents like dropping them all over the floor and needing to reorganize them or worse, the ghost in the machine should rear its head?

      You'll fear the worst, but the worst only grows logarithmically in proportion to your collection.

      Eventually you pass on opportunities elsewhere because you're worried about moving your ever-growing collection. What if the war should obliterate your work? Maybe you should take them into the war with you, because you can't bear to be apart?

      If you grow up at a time when Schrodinger's cat is in the zeitgeist, you're definitely going to have nightmares that what's written on your cards could horrifyingly change every time you look at them. Worse, knowing about the Heisenberg Uncertainly Principle, you're deathly afraid that there might be cards, like electrons, which are always changing position in ways you'll never be able to know or predict.

      As a systems theorist, you view your own note taking system as a input/output machine. Then you see Claude Shannon's "useless machine" (based on an idea of Marvin Minsky) whose only function is to switch itself off. You become horrified with the idea that the knowledge machine you've painstakingly built and have documented the ways it acts as an independent thought partner may somehow become self-aware and shut itself off!?!

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gNa9v8Z7Rac

      And worst of all, on top of all this, all your hard work, effort, and untold hours of sweat creating thousands of cards will be wiped away by a potential unknowable single bit of information on a lone, malicious card and your only recourse is suicide, the unfortunate victim of dataism.

      Of course, if you somehow manage to overcome the hurdle of suicidal thoughts, and your collection keeps growing without bound, then you're sure to die in a torrential whirlwind avalanche of information and cards, literally done in by information overload.

      But, not wishing to admit any of this, much less all of this, you imagine a simple trickster, a joker, something silly. You write it down on yet another card and you file it away into the box, linked only to the card in front of it, the end of a short line of cards with nothing following it, because what could follow it? Put it out of your mind and hope your fears disappear away with it, lost in your box like the jokerzettel you imagined. You do this with a self-assured confidence that this way of making sense of the world works well for you, and you settle back into the methodical work of reading and writing, intent on making your next thousands of cards.

    1. CollectionCho Chikun Encyclopedia of Life and Death - Elementary (350-499)Difficulty12 Kyu

      bent four is alive unless it bends at 1-1

    1. Bild 153

      1609

      Mrs Nickel Kröll

      1610

      Anna Zocher

    2. Bild 144

      1601

      Nickel Kröll

    3. Bild 157

      1616

      Michael Sehnitz

    4. Bild 133

      1585

      Mrs Asmus Zocher

      Asmus Zocher

    5. Bild 138

      1592

      Urban Kuntze

    6. Bild 143

      1600

      Anna Kuntze, 13