Psst, a personal wiki is not really a wiki... since they should support the collaborative accumulation of knowledge.
Rather, a personal wiki more-so connotes a knowledge base with an emergent graph structure with links. This relates to other ideas we see as popular in online spaces, such as the [[Second brain|second brain]] or [[Digital garden|digital gardens]], which I consider as types of personal wikis.
Though with respect to the Buddhist concept of 'non-self', you could see a personal wiki as a medium of collaboration with this chain of conscious experience at different points in time. That is, a medium through which points of experience can interact, engage with and build on ideas from points of experience at different times. Irrespective of that all these collaborating points of experience arise from the same model that we call the self.
Note, wikis do not have to be objective or neutral in the way information is presented - a myth that may have been propagated through Wikipedia's famously strict neutral point of view policy.
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In relation to education and technology, there exists:
* [SuperMemo Wiki](https://supermemo.guru/wiki/SuperMemo_Guru) from [[Piotr Woźniak]], which is highly opinionated and a means through which he disseminates his research (it is one of my favourites to read through).
* [EduTech Wiki](https://edutechwiki.unige.ch/en/Main_Page) is not strictly personal, but is primarily contributed to and owned by Daniel K. Schneider. It is less-so opinionated and a good resource to get to grips with many basic ideas within educational technology.
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TODO:
* talk about lesswrong
* gwern.net
* other bloggers that cross into areas of research, eg. HCI apple markdown guy