Business Management Skills

Information and Resources for Managers and Supervisors

Tony Buzan: Popularizer of How to Mind Map

November 16th, 2009 by managementskills

People learning how to mind map owe a great deal to Tony Buzan. This prolific writer and educational consultant resurrected the idea of making pictorial maps of ideas, and in the last decades of the twentieth century and into this century, he has been promoting this technique of gaining and understanding knowledge. While he wasn’t the originator of the method (there has been evidence of the sporadic use of these sorts of mind tools for centuries), Buzan has been the force behind its modernization and renewed use.

Buzan stands on the shoulders of several others who developed earlier precursors of mind map methods. Allan M. Collins and M. Ross Quillian in particular completed research on “semantic networks,” exploring how learning, creativity and graphical thinking were related. But Buzan also credits the semantic theories of Alfred Korzybski as his inspiration for understanding how to create a mind map. These theories were given life by science fiction novelists such as Robert Heinlein and A.E. van Vogt, but it was Buzan who put them into popular form and made them accessible to the general public.

For Tony Buzan mind maps are much more aligned with the way people naturally scan pages of text. Rather than reading left-to-right, top-to-bottom, as Western schools teach, people absorb the contents of pages in a more visual, non-linear way, according to Buzan. Thus, when they learn how to mind map, they are relating to material with their right brain. And when they do this, they may discover relationships between ideas that they had never recognized before.

In 2006, Buzan released a mindmapping software program called “iMindMap, and he has published many books on memory, speed reading, and of course on creating maps of the mind itself. He also has a website called “Buzan World,” where he promotes his ideas. Over the years he has founded many organizations such as the Brain Foundation, the Brain Trust Charity, the World Memory Championships, and the World Championships of the Brain. But although he is well known for exploring all aspects of the mind, he is probably best known for his promotion and education on all aspects of how to mind map.

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This entry was posted on Monday, November 16th, 2009 at 1:09 pm and is filed under Time Management Skills. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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