How to Boost Your Brain Power: Think Like a Master
The secret to using your whole brain.

“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn and relearn.” — Alvin Toffler
Overplaying to your strengths can be dangerous.
“Your arms are not what they used to be.” — That was my wife’s feedback on my cycling improvement recount.
During the past five years, I rediscovered the pleasure of road biking. I dramatically improved my fitness, lost weight, and rode more frequent and longer distances. However, I forgot to take care of my upper body.
Focusing on strengths can hinder not pushing yourself to develop other skills.
Your brain is a muscle. To boost its full power, you can’t just exercise certain parts but all of them. Experiment with different types of thinking. Not just the one you are used to. Think like a master.
Your Brain Is, by Design, a Whole
“If you never change your mind, why have one?” — Edward de Bono
Your brain thinks in many distinct ways. Depending on the challenge you must address, one type of thinking is more effective than the other. If you are only using one style, your ability to develop new ideas or make a decision will be limited.
Edward de Bono, the author of Lateral Thinking, created the “Six Thinking Hats” method. The psychologist believes that we must challenge our brain to create more effective solutions. In each of the six directions, by training your brain, you can consciously play with different types of perspectives (e.g., gut instinct, pessimistic judgment, neutral facts).
When you choose the right type of thinking — not the one you usually default to — your brain power increases dramatically.
If you have a whole brain, why just use portions of it?
The left-right brain approach is a trap. According to Ed Herrmann, this dichotomy, simplifying our thinking in just two groups, creates a wrong perception of how our brain works.
“The brain is, by design, a whole.” — Ned Herrmann
The specialized neurons are interdependent; your brain relies on interconnections between specialized areas to function.
In their book “The Whole Brain Business,” Ned Herrmann and his daughter Ann, outline four basic thinking styles — administrator, talker, problem-solver, dreamer — corresponding to the four quadrants of the brain. Most people thinking is dominated by only one.
Some of us are inclined to focus on the big picture. Others are detail-oriented or tend to follow their gut. Using a whole brain approach will help leverage all your thinking styles, not just the one you default to.
Experts tend to use their brain playing to their strengths. Artists, detectives, journalists, poets, and philosophers — to name a few — apply unique thinking styles. Each approach is perfect for their specific fields.
What if you could borrow each of these masters’ thinking style?
Understanding various thinking approaches will help you boost your brain power.
Detectives Use Mindfulness and Deduction
“I consider that a man’s brain originally is like a little empty attic, and you have to stock it with such furniture as you choose.” — Sherlock Holmes
Detectives look for clues to find out what the real solution is. That requires always observing, rather than simply seeing.
Sherlock Holmes spent his life in mindful interaction with the world around him. Your intuition can sometimes be tinted by your beliefs or blind spots. Mindfulness, however, promotes an open mind; you don’t judge the facts but observe them.
Maria Konnikova, author of Mastermind: How to Think Like Sherlock Holmes, explains how mindfulness helped the famous detective return his wandering attention to focus on whatever mattered to him,.
Holmes observed facts without being judgmental. The detective focused on finding the connections and making sense out of everything he observed. He applied the principles of Deductive Reasoning.
Holmes would write down some hypothesis about what he believed happened. He would then search for more evidence to logically validate his initial statements. Sherlock deconstructed what happened.
P. D. James said: ‘What the detective story is about is not murder but the restoration of order.”
Deduction requires taking distance. Forcing your mind to take a step back is not easy. It seems counterintuitive to walk away from a problem you want to solve. Watson couldn’t detach from the issue at hand. He couldn’t understand how Holmes mastered throwing his brain out of action — focusing on lighter things when he could no longer work to advantage.
Think like a detective:
- Observe without judging.
- Write down your hypothesis.
- Step back and let your mind create the connections.
- Be mindful of your own biases.
- Validate your hypothesis with rigor and objectivity.
Philosophers Master The Power of Questions
“If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough.” — Albert Einstein
Philosophers, like detectives, have inquisitive minds. However, rather than trying to solve a crime, they aim to understand the meaning of life. They don’t seek for a simplified (‘yes’ or ‘no’) answer; philosophers want to address the “why.”
Philosophers way of thinking seems to be stuck addressing ethereal problems — especially for relentless pragmatics like Americans who just want to cut to the chase. However, addressing challenging abstract issues such as “What’s freedom?” or “What’s the meaning of life?” can help develop your reasoning.
Socrates said: “The unexamined life is not worth living.”
Vertical or lateral thinking are both part of a philosopher state of mind. They use life as their canvas: observation and their own experiences help them find answers to these lofty questions.
We all fall prey to ‘confirmation bias,’ as I explained here — our minds tend to see what supports our beliefs. Considering alternative possibilities and continuously challenging our beliefs helps overcome your bias.
Daniel Dennett, one of the master living philosophers, wants to turn everyone into a philosopher. His book Intuition Pumps and Other Tools for Thinking, explores the labyrinth of mind games. The philosopher explains that ‘Intuition Pumps’ are stories and scenarios that invite you to “twiddle the knobs” — changing one little detail raises new questions or uncovers new conclusions.
Think like a philosopher:
- Don’t take anything for granted.
- Use your daily experience as a stimulus to challenge your beliefs.
- Spot the weakness in an argument.
- Try to modify the problem before solving it.
- “Twiddle the knobs” of thought; explore new alternatives and conclusions.






