Memory and Its Cultivation"One of the most marked features of the present age is the invention of labour and time saving appliances; it is evident that time saved is time gained. In an age which is specially characterised by intellectual progress, much time must necessarily be expended in the acquirement of knowledge, which will serve as a basis for further development. I hope, therefore, that any rules which will lighten labour in this direction will be found useful. After discovering the facts which led me to write on the subject of Memory, I found that I could learn a subject in about a fifth of the time that it previously took me. I hope that those who read this book will be able to improve their memories in a corresponding degree"--Preface. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2013 APA, all rights reserved). |
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Page 4
... sentence before we had heard the conclusion . If it were not for memory , our native tongue would be as unintelligible as a foreign language is to most persons . We feel that there is a distinct difference between easy remembrance and ...
... sentence before we had heard the conclusion . If it were not for memory , our native tongue would be as unintelligible as a foreign language is to most persons . We feel that there is a distinct difference between easy remembrance and ...
Page 17
... sentences intelligible in themselves , but having slight connection with each other . Of her Hebrew sayings only a few could be traced to the Bible , and most seemed to be in the Rabbinical dialect . All trick was out of the question ...
... sentences intelligible in themselves , but having slight connection with each other . Of her Hebrew sayings only a few could be traced to the Bible , and most seemed to be in the Rabbinical dialect . All trick was out of the question ...
Page 32
... sentence to express the idea , and the motor memory , in association with the sensory , having retained how each word should be written , brings about the required movements . We now pass on to the second class of cases : those in which ...
... sentence to express the idea , and the motor memory , in association with the sensory , having retained how each word should be written , brings about the required movements . We now pass on to the second class of cases : those in which ...
Page 101
... sentence from a language with which none of them are conversant be recited to them , on asking each to repeat the sentence , psycho - physical differences will be evident . There are many persons who are not able to repeat a foreign ...
... sentence from a language with which none of them are conversant be recited to them , on asking each to repeat the sentence , psycho - physical differences will be evident . There are many persons who are not able to repeat a foreign ...
Page 155
... later date the impression of the flower is revived , those ideas are naturally revived with it . The same occurs with language : the component parts of a sentence are not noticed usually , but REMEMBRANCE , RECOGNITION , ETC. 155.
... later date the impression of the flower is revived , those ideas are naturally revived with it . The same occurs with language : the component parts of a sentence are not noticed usually , but REMEMBRANCE , RECOGNITION , ETC. 155.
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Common terms and phrases
ALBERT SCHWEGLER animals aphasia APPLETON basal ganglia Battersea Park become associated brain brought centre cerebellum cerebral hemispheres cerebrum colour-blindness component consciousness contiguous definite developed difficulty direct revival easily example fact faculty of form faculty of locality FRANK HAMILTON CUSHING function ganglion cells give gray matter ideas Illustrations impres impressions received individual intensity large faculty large number law of remembrance learning letters looked mental mind motor memory movement necessary nerves nervous force noticed object obtained occur optic thalami orange perceived perception performed person phrenology physical series picture plane-tree point of difference portion possess previous impressions Professor psycho-physical colour psycho-physical series recollection reflex action represented retina reviving impression rule seen sense sensory impressions sensory memory sentence sight similar sions special memory spectrum student take place tion tune unconscious cerebration violet whilst whole words writing written Zerah Colburn
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