What is Thinking?
Thinking is your cognitive operating system. It isn’t knowledge itself — it’s the process by which you handle knowledge and generate judgment. Different thinking frameworks are like different lenses. The same reality, viewed through first principles, becomes “everything can be rebuilt from scratch.” Through systems thinking, it becomes “every outcome has feedback loops.” Through inversion, it becomes “first map the failure paths.”How you think determines what you see — and what you see determines how far you go.This category covers 35 core thinking frameworks, organized into three groups:
- Cognitive Frameworks: the foundational structures through which you understand the world
- Reasoning Styles: approaches for making better judgments under uncertainty
- Mindsets: the long-term cognitive postures that compound over a lifetime
Cognitive Frameworks
First Principles Thinking
Strip away all assumptions; reason up from fundamental truths
Systems Thinking
Understand wholes, structures, and feedback loops
Critical Thinking
Disciplined analysis and evaluation of information and arguments
Design Thinking
Human-centered, iterative problem-solving
Dialectical Thinking
Synthesize contradictions to generate deeper understanding
Metacognition
Think about your own thinking process
Thought Experiments
Explore conceptual boundaries through hypothetical scenarios
Scenario Thinking
Build multiple plausible futures to navigate uncertainty
Reasoning Styles
Lateral Thinking
Bypass linear logic; solve problems through creative indirect paths
Second-Order Thinking
Consider the consequences of consequences, not just immediate effects
Probabilistic Thinking
Evaluate outcomes with probabilities rather than certainties
Inversion Thinking
Clarify what you want to avoid before planning what to pursue
Analogical Thinking
Transfer insights across domains through structural similarities
Counterfactual Thinking
Imagine alternative outcomes to improve future judgment
Abductive Reasoning
Infer the most likely explanation from incomplete observations
Bayesian Thinking
Continuously update your beliefs as new evidence arrives
Reductionist Thinking
Decompose complex systems into simpler, analyzable parts
Holistic Thinking
The whole is greater than the sum of its parts
Nonlinear Thinking
Cause and effect are rarely proportional or sequential
Abstract Thinking
Extract universal principles from specific cases
Concrete Thinking
Anchor abstract concepts with tangible examples
Empirical Thinking
Ground knowledge in observation and experimentation
Pragmatic Thinking
Judge ideas by their practical consequences, not their elegance
Mindsets
Growth Mindset
Abilities can be developed through dedication and effort
Fixed Mindset
The belief that abilities are innate — understand it to transcend it
Abundance Mindset
There is enough success and value for everyone to share
Scarcity Mindset
The zero-sum view of the world — recognize it to escape it
Long-Term Thinking
Extend the time horizon of every decision you make
Divergent Thinking
Generate multiple possibilities from a single starting point
Convergent Thinking
Identify the best solution from a range of alternatives
Red-Team Thinking
Actively argue against your own plan to stress-test it
Pre-Mortem Thinking
Imagine future failure now to identify risks before they materialize
Compass Over Maps
In uncertainty, direction matters more than a detailed plan
T-Shaped Thinking
Deep expertise in one domain combined with broad cross-disciplinary fluency
Zero-Based Thinking
“Knowing what I know now, would I make this same choice again?”