Writers use Keimenon to organize research, structure projects, and publish collections.
Writers use Keimenon to structure long-form writing projects across scattered sources — notes, research material, AI-assisted drafts, and reference documents. Start from a structured corpus, not a blank page.
Research notes, AI conversations, drafts, and references accumulate over years. Individually they're fragments; together they form a book. Keimenon organises them into navigable collections so you can see the shape of your project.
A fact from an article, a phrase from a conversation, a concept from a book — when you write, you need to find these again. Corpus search and the Knowledge Graph let you navigate back to any source by concept, theme, or relationship.
Opening one document, then another, then searching for a note, then checking a reference — writing becomes navigation. The Context Panel keeps related material visible alongside whatever you're working on.
Many writers develop ideas through AI dialogue — long conversations that explore, refine, and articulate. Keimenon parses these conversations and extracts the narrative material for inclusion in writing projects.