Reclaim your attention, make sense of complexity, and build a mind you can rely on with this radical guide to thinking for yourself in a world that tries to think on your behalf--the first English translation of the Japanese bestseller with over 3 million copies sold. We live in an age defined by accelerating automation, polarized discourse, and constant cognitive overload. In
The Art of Organizing Thoughts, first published in 1983 and newly resonant in the age of artificial intelligence, renowned scholar and teacher Shigehiko Toyama offers a humane and timeless reminder: Thinking well is a distinctly human art, and one that must be cultivated, protected, and practiced. Toyama argues that knowledge alone is not wisdom--in fact, the more we accumulate, the easier it is to stop truly thinking.
The Art of Organizing Thoughts explains how to move from overloaded to clear-minded, not by consuming more information, but by learning how to organize what you already know.
The foundation of
The Art of Organizing Thoughts explains that schools and workplaces overwhelmingly produce "gliders," people who move only when pushed by external instructions, while what society desperately needs are "airplanes," or independent, self-propelled thinkers. Toyama shows how to cultivate that airplane mentality through simple practices: letting ideas ferment over time, learning when to sleep on a problem, and using selective forgetting as a tool to keep your mind clear and creative.
Part philosophy, part practical handbook, the book offers a calming alternative to hustle culture through concrete practices for busy, intelligent readers who feel scattered and want a mind they can trust.
The Art of Organizing Thoughts invites a return to analog habits and deep attention--not to do more, but to think better and live more clearly.