As I’ve tried to explain over and over, including once to Conor, if you want to improve thinking (rather than, say, “knowledge management” (text snippet / link management?)), you have to watch thinking think, think about how thinking thinks, and ask thinking what it would need in order to think better. No one who sets out to build so-called “tools for thinking” ever does this. They instead think of cool-sounding things to have, and then get excited imagining how those things might free your thoughts from the nested directory structure or whatever, and come up with unassailable arguments about that.
As I’ve tried to explain over and over, including once to Conor, if you want to improve thinking (rather than, say, “knowledge management” (text snippet / link management?)), you have to watch thinking think, think about how thinking thinks, and ask thinking what it would need in order to think better. No one who sets out to build so-called “tools for thinking” ever does this. They instead think of cool-sounding things to have, and then get excited imagining how those things might free your thoughts from the nested directory structure or whatever, and come up with unassailable arguments about that.