2021 · Adam Grant · Viking · ~25 min read

Think
again.

When was the last time you changed your mind? If you can't remember, Adam Grant wrote this book for you.

Learn · Understand · Apply
UNLEARN
RECONSIDER
DOUBT

Old-school intelligence rewards thinking and learning. In a world that won't sit still, the people who win are the ones who can rethink and unlearn.

Adam Grant opens with the Mann Gulch tragedy of 1949. Twelve smokejumpers died because they couldn't drop their tools and old beliefs. Only Wagner Dodge survived — he set a fire of his own to clear a safe patch of ground. The lesson is harsh: sometimes you have to throw away what once kept you alive, just to keep living.

Adam Grant has a blind spot worth flagging. Changing your mind costs something. Flip too often and you're a flake — nobody trusts you. Cling too hard and you're a fossil. The book doesn't tell you where the line is. That's the math you'll do for yourself.

Rethink RETHINK Relearn RELEARN Let go UNLEARN Ask again QUESTION

When you're thinking, what mode are you in?

Your brain runs on four default modes. Three of them — Preacher, Prosecutor, Politician — share one trait: the door is shut to anything new. Only the fourth mode, Scientist, opens the door to growth. The trap is that you spend most of your time in the first three without noticing.

01
P

Preacher mode

When something hits a core belief, you stop reconsidering. You start preaching. The harder you get pushed back, the louder you get to drown out the other side.

The clearest sign: you're broadcasting without doubt. Look at Mike Lazaridis, the former chief of BlackBerry. When the iPhone launched in 2007, he called it a stupid idea. Nine years later, BlackBerry had lost almost all of its market.
02
P

Prosecutor mode

You're not testing your own beliefs. You're collecting evidence to convict the other side. The point isn't the truth — it's winning the case.

You remember every weakness in their argument and stay blind to the holes in your own. Most arguments on social media now are giant prosecutor courts — everyone wants to take the other side down instead of understanding them.
03
P

Politician mode

You say what the crowd wants to hear. Your view bends to whoever is in front of you. You don't hold beliefs — you hold a strategy for staying liked.

You see this clearly on professional networks like LinkedIn. The same person flips position to please whichever audience is watching. You're curving with the wind instead of standing on what the evidence shows.
04
S

Scientist mode

You treat every opinion as a hypothesis to test, not a piece of who you are. If you're wrong, you learn. If you're right, that's only true for now — until sharper evidence shows up.

A simple test: ask yourself what specific evidence would change your mind. If you can't name it, you're not a scientist. You're a preacher in a lab coat.

A detailed map of the book

Adam Grant built a path from changing yourself to changing your community. Read in order — understand how the mind moves before you try to move it.

01

Four characters live in your head

Part One: Rethinking from the inside

Mike Lazaridis at BlackBerry got swallowed by the spiral of self-satisfaction. He chased validation from loyal fans and ignored the fact that the world had moved on. The opposite spiral — humility, doubt, curiosity, discovery — is what kept other companies alive.

Overconfidence cycle Rethinking cycle Thinking mode

Key idea

A war between two spirals. The overconfidence spiral locks you in old assumptions. The rethinking spiral frees you with humility and relentless curiosity.

Apply it

  • When you start forming a view, treat it as a hypothesis, not a belief.
  • List it: "What evidence would change my mind?" If nothing comes, you're in Preacher mode.
  • Ask yourself: "Am I trying to be right, or trying to find the truth?"

The Curse of Knowledge: when you know too much, you forget what not knowing feels like — and your mind closes to new angles.

02

The sweet spot of confidence

Stay clear of arrogance and impostor syndrome.

Overconfidence blinds you. Impostor syndrome paralyzes you. Halla Tómasdóttir showed you can doubt your current solution and absolutely trust your ability to learn — at the same time.

Confident humility Mount Stupid Dunning-Kruger

Key idea

Confident humility is the courage to admit you don't know how, while believing you can learn.

Mount Stupid (the Dunning-Kruger effect)

The less you know, the more you think you've mastered it. That's the peak of stupid.

Apply it

  • When you doubt your skill: separate "I don't know HOW" from "I CAN'T learn." You can trust your ability to learn while doubting your current solution.
  • Self-test: try explaining a topic you think you know to someone else. If you fumble → you're on Mount Stupid.
03

The joy of being wrong

The thrill of being freed from dogma.

When you equate beliefs with self, every wrong becomes a deep wound. When you treat beliefs as hypotheses, being wrong becomes a gift. Learn to celebrate it.

Detach identity Joy of being wrong Totalitarian ego

Key idea

The dictator-ego censors every opposing piece of info to keep your perfect armor intact.

Two ways to detach yourself from your beliefs

  • Detach from the past: today's you isn't five-years-ago you. Changing your mind isn't betrayal.
  • Detach from opinion: identify with values (curious, learning, truth-seeking), not specific positions.

"The goal is not to be wrong more often. It's to recognize that we're wrong more often than we like to admit."

04

The club of civil disagreement

The power of constructive conflict.

Silence isn't peace — usually it's a scary kind of apathy. The best teams have lots of task conflict and stay close emotionally. Learn to argue honestly.

Task vs Relationship Challenge network Productive conflict

Key idea

Every effective team needs at least one person whose job is to attack old ideas — to force everyone to rethink.

Challenge Network vs Support Network

You need both: support network to cheer you on, challenge network to push back. Most people only have support.

Apply it

  • List it: who are 3-5 people who push back honestly? That's your challenge network.
  • When you disagree, frame it as "debate" not "fight" — your brain processes them completely differently.
  • How often you argue matters less than how you argue.
05

A dance with your opponent

Part Two: Rethinking with others

A debate isn't a shootout to find a winner. It's a dance — both sides moving fluidly, forward and back. Don't throw a dozen weak arguments. Pick a few strong ones.

Debate as dance Common ground Question ratio

Four findings about strong debaters

  • Fewer arguments, not more: average people pile on reasons; experts focus on the 2-3 strongest.
  • Concede common ground: it doesn't weaken you — it shows good faith and opens dialogue.
  • Ask more than you assert: high question-to-statement ratio = more persuasive.
  • Don't counter-attack emotionally: when attacked, the strong don't defend — they ask.

Apply it

Next time you argue with your boss/coworker/partner, count: how many statements did you make, how many questions did you ask? Flip the ratio.

06

Erasing deep-rooted stereotypes

Break the mental templates you have about other people.

Stereotypes never dissolve through heated arguments. They soften when you bravely make personal contact and ask: "If I had been born somewhere else, would I still hold this belief?"

Destabilize stereotypes Counterfactual thinking Personal contact

Key idea

Stereotypes don't dissolve through head-on debate. They dissolve when (1) you make personal contact with someone outside your group, and (2) you ask the counterfactual: "If you had been born in a different time/place, would you still believe this?"

Counterfactual thinking

Most of what you believe is the random luck of your situation, not the result of deep reflection.

Apply it

  • When you meet someone with a stereotype: ask "do you remember the first time you formed this view?"
  • Ask yourself: if I had been born into a different family/country/religion, would I still believe this?
07

The art of listening to change minds

How to help others convince themselves.

You can't force a closed mind to open. Instead of preaching, ask open questions — let them find their own contradictions. Self-persuasion is far more powerful than persuasion from outside.

Motivational Interviewing Listening to change Self-persuasion

Three principles of Motivational Interviewing

  • Open-ended questions: let them voice the reason for change themselves (self-persuasion is 10× stronger than imposition).
  • Reflective listening: repeat what they said in different words — they feel heard, and they see their own contradictions.
  • Affirm their desire to change: don't persuade — clarify what they already want.

Apply it

When someone is stubborn (spouse/child/coworker): replace your statements with open questions. "I think you should…" → "What do you think about…"

"You can't make someone agree with you. Better to ask what would open their mind."

08

Cooling down heated conversations

Part Three: Rethinking in community

Binary bias is splitting the world. Things aren't just black and white. When you intentionally bring in shades of gray and the inner contradictions of an issue, the other side's brain is forced to slow down.

Binary bias Complexifying Shades of grey

Binary bias

Your brain wants to split everything into two sides for clarity. That's why seeing an opposing view doesn't change you — it makes you dig in harder.

Complexifying

Learn to complicate the problem. It's poison to narrow stereotypes.

Apply it

  • When writing/speaking on a hot issue: deliberately bring in at least 3 angles, not just "for vs against".
  • When debating someone: find the inner contradictions of the issue instead of going head-on.
  • Watch for "X vs Y" headlines — that's binary bias being amplified.
09

Rewriting outdated truths

Teach the next generation how to question.

School shouldn't be a place to memorize fixed facts. It should be a museum where students get to question everything in the textbook. Knowledge is a flowing river, not a frozen lake.

Inquiry-based learning Knowledge evolves Critical thinking

Key idea

Traditional education treats knowledge as static and the textbook as truth. The best education treats knowledge as moving — and puts students in the seat of the questioner, not the receiver.

Three methods for teaching rethinking

  • Treat classrooms like museums: things to explore, not answers to memorize.
  • Approach projects like carpenters: many drafts, revise and revise.
  • Rewrite textbooks: students rewrite them themselves — flip from passive to active.

Lessons for working adults

When learning anything: don't just read. Rewrite what you read in your own voice and angle. That's real rethinking.

10

Killing "we always do it this way"

Build a culture of non-stop learning.

Performance-first culture is the seed of silent disasters. You need a psychologically safe environment — where everyone is confident enough to call out a mistake the moment they spot it.

Psychological safety Performance vs Learning culture Process accountability

Performance culture vs Learning culture

  • Performance culture: worship outcomes, punish mistakes → people hide errors → disaster.
  • Learning culture: worship the thinking process, safe to question → mistakes caught early → improvement.

Process accountability

Don't grade decisions only by outcome. Bad process + good outcome = luck. Good process + bad outcome = smart experiment. That's the rethinking scorecard.

Apply it

  • Replace "best practices" with "better practices" — keep the door open for improvement.
  • When reviewing a deal/project: separate process from outcome. A right-process decision can still produce a bad result because of market noise.
11

Pulling yourself out of tunnel vision

Part Four: Rethinking your own future

Adam Grant's cousin Ryan: locked into "must be a doctor" since age 5 → became a neurosurgeon → burned out → regret. The wrong question: "What do you want to be when you grow up?" The right one: "What do you want to learn today, contribute today?" Passion is built, not discovered. In Vietnam, life paths get locked in from age five: must be a doctor, engineer, or comfortable bank job. Twenty years later, those kids stand frozen in the middle of a career they never picked, wondering why nothing tastes right.

Tunnel vision Escalation of commitment Life checkup

Escalation of commitment

The deeper you go down a wrong path, the harder it is to turn around. That's the trap of blind loyalty to your past self.

Life checkup

Like a health checkup, you need regular life checkups. Ask yourself: am I actually learning, or just repeating worn-out habits?

  • What am I learning? (If = 0, red flag.)
  • How are my beliefs and goals evolving?
  • Does the next step need rethinking?

Apply it

  • Throw out the 10-year plan. Make a 1-year plan. What you love today might bore you next year — and that's fine.
  • Identify by values (curious, contributing) instead of job (engineer, lawyer).
  • Happiness is fleeting; meaning lasts — and meaning comes from action, not circumstance.

Ten core principles for thinking again

Ten quick prompts to break the chain of self-satisfaction. Flip a card, train your mind every day, until healthy doubt becomes instinct.

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Did you actually get it?

10 questions — not memory tests, comprehension tests. Some have two "close" answers; only one is right. Miss 3+ → reread Part I (chapters 1-3). Miss 5+ → reread the whole book; you missed the main ideas.

Question 1 / 10 Score: 0

Thirty actions to actually rewire

Don't try to do all of them. Pick the three that make you most uncomfortable and start there. Quiet thinking is your weapon against an age that lives on the surface.

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Write to face yourself

These pages aren't for anyone else. They're the most honest conversation you'll have with your own assumptions. Take thirty minutes to actually strip down a belief you've been carrying around.

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Prompt 01

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