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Notes from "The Art of Thinking"

2026-04-15
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ZH EN JA

The core framework of this book: the root cause of Japanese business problems lies in the thinking habit of "executing without hypothesis verification."

Assumptions Are Not Conclusions

Ohmae Kenichi points out: most people confuse "hypothesis" and "conclusion." When they see a problem, they immediately generate an intuitive judgment, then spend all their energy collecting evidence that "supports" this judgment — rather than "verifying" it.

Collecting evidence to support a conclusion you've already reached is called confirmation bias, not analysis.

My Three Practices

  • Hypothesize before output: Before outputting any analysis, write down "what is my hypothesis" in one sentence
  • Reverse listing: After writing each conclusion, force yourself to write "three arguments supporting the opposite conclusion"
  • Time delay: Don't output important judgments immediately; place them for 6 hours then review
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