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The Art of Useful Ignorance: Why Not Knowing Everything Makes You Smarter

Staff Writer
May 23, 2026

There's a moment in every person's intellectual life where they realize they will never read all the books, master all the skills, or understand all the systems that govern their world. Most of us panic. We speed-read summaries. We half-listen to podcasts. We convince ourselves that if we just optimize our time management enough, we can somehow download the entire library of human knowledge into our skulls before we die.

But Montaigne—the 16th-century French essayist who basically invented the essay as a form of honest thinking—understood something radical: the question isn't how much you can know, but *what's worth knowing*. He lived in a tower surrounded by books and made a choice that sounds almost heretical today. He stopped trying to read everything and started asking which books actually changed how he thought.

This matters because we live in the age of infinite content. You can learn literally anything in minutes. But that abundance creates a peculiar poverty: decision paralysis. We waste more time deciding what to learn than actually learning it. We collect information like we're trying to fill a hole that keeps getting bigger.

What Montaigne discovered—and what neuroscience now confirms—is that deep focus on fewer things creates stronger neural pathways than shallow exposure to many things. Your brain doesn't work like a hard drive. It works like a relationship. Depth builds understanding. Breadth builds anxiety.

The practical application is almost embarrassingly simple: become deliberately ignorant about most things. Choose three or four domains that genuinely fascinate you—not because they look good on a resume, but because you lose track of time studying them. Let everything else go. Don't feel guilty about not knowing the latest discourse on Twitter, about missing that podcast everyone's discussing, about not having read the canonical novel everyone assumes educated people have read.

This isn't anti-intellectual. It's the opposite. It's trusting your own curiosity enough to ignore the noise. Montaigne's essays remain alive four centuries later precisely because he wrote from genuine puzzlement about the things he actually cared about—friendship, death, education, the nature of cannibals—rather than performing erudition about subjects that bored him.

The smartest people you know probably aren't the ones who've read the most. They're the ones who've read deeply enough in their chosen obsessions to think originally about them. They've given themselves permission to be ignorant about almost everything, which somehow makes them seem like they know more.

Try it tomorrow. When something trends that you feel obligated to understand, ask yourself: will not knowing this diminish my life? The answer is almost always no. Then use that reclaimed attention on something that actually sets your mind on fire.

RELATED:

"I have made it a rule to forego knowledge of useless things." — John Maynard Keynes, economist

"The man who reads nothing at all is better educated than the man who reads nothing but newspapers." — Thomas Jefferson, polymath (though even Jefferson knew what to ignore)

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