My Knowledge System

This video shows a snapshot of my personal knowledge system in Obsidian, an environment I use to study through a systems-thinking approach.

The graph visualization reflects how I learn: by linking ideas rather than storing isolated notes. Many of the nodes come from scientific studies, historical experiments, health-related mechanisms, and behavioral research. By connecting them, I can trace how concepts interact across disciplines and see patterns that aren’t visible when topics are studied separately.

In practice, this system helps me:

Although the graph looks broad, its purpose is depth: mapping out how different ideas converge, conflict, or reinforce each other. This same method shapes my interest in regenerative health, where understanding connections across systems is essential. It also influences how I approach entrepreneurship and projects like Risorgi, which are built around linking information.

The video is simply one visualization of how I learn: thinking in systems, creating structure from complexity, and using interconnected ideas to guide long-term curiosity.

If you would like to talk about knowledge systems or Obsidian, feel free to reach out at gabriele@gabrieledigilio.com