Large Language Models (LLMs) have shown prominent performance in various downstream tasks in which prompt engineering plays a pivotal role in optimizing LLMs' performance. This paper, not as an overview of current prompt engineering methods, aims to highlight the limitation of designing prompts while holding an anthropomorphic assumption that expects LLMs to think like humans. From our review of 35 representative studies, we demonstrate that a goal-oriented prompt formulation, which guides LLMs to follow established human logical thinking, significantly improves the performance of LLMs. Furthermore, We introduce a novel taxonomy that categorizes goal-oriented prompting methods into five interconnected stages and we demonstrate the broad applicability of our framework by summarizing ten applicable tasks. With four future directions proposed, we hope to further emphasize and promote goal-oriented prompt engineering.