Digital gardening represents a shift in personal knowledge management, moving away from static, polished content toward evolving, "half-baked" ideas that grow over time. This ethos prioritizes the process of thinking and epistemological transparency over the pressure to produce definitive, permanent statements. Metaphors such as gardening, farming, and mining frame how individuals structure their knowledge, highlighting the need for tools that support spatial, non-linear, and visual thinking. Because current web infrastructure remains largely text-centric and linear, emerging tools like Cosmic and Muse are attempting to bridge the gap between embodied, spatial cognition and digital documentation. Collaborative knowledge sharing, modeled after community allotments or shared knowledge graphs, offers a path toward collective intellectual growth, provided that users establish clear social protocols for managing these interconnected, living systems.
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