Whenever encountering things and dealing with various problems, people often need to think about themselves in order to make corresponding decisions and propose solutions. By thinking and judging events rationally, everyone can become a wise man in their own life. Let’s take a look at common ways of focused thinking.


1. Push-up thinking


Push-up thinking includes three thinking paths. The first is the cause chain tracing method, which is to keep asking why until you find the source of the problem. The second is the time-space retrospective method, which is to find the root cause of the problem through comparison. The third is to trace the source and reliability of the evidence to verify whether the current evidence is reliable and credible.


2. Analogical thinking


This kind of thinking is mainly inspired by the similarity of different things. It is really appropriate to use idioms such as "this and that" and "by analogy" to describe analogical thinking. In daily life, we should pay attention to cultivate our keen observation, focus on the similarity or identity of things, be good at connecting different objects, and effectively integrate and use some seemingly non-existent related information.


3. Bo Ben's thinking


Ordinary people generally feel that the "Bo Ben Theory" sounds too far away and too foreign to have anything to do with our lives or to help us deal with everyday problems. In fact, the role of Boban theory is omnipresent, ranging from disarmament and world peace, to how to make parents' intimidation of punishment on children credible, all of which can be analyzed by Boban theory.


4. Reverse thinking


To think backwards, you must first break the mindset. The so-called mind set refers to a pre-prepared mental state for people to engage in a certain activity, which can affect the trend, degree and way of subsequent activities.


The factors that constitute the mindset are mainly the fixed tendency of cognition. Previously formed knowledge, experience, and habits will make people form a fixed tendency of cognition, which will affect subsequent analysis and judgment, and form a "mindset" - that is, thinking can never get rid of the shackles of the existing "frame", showing that negative tendencies.


5. Logical thinking


Correct thinking is based on logical methods, which usually include two basic methods. Induction is the process of leading from the part to the whole and from a specific case to a general case. It is based on experience and empirical evidence, and draws conclusions from the basis. The episodic method is based on general logical assumptions, and the reasoning process that leads to a specific conclusion is the episodic method.