Summary of Moonwalking with Einstein|The Art and Science of Remembering Everything book by Joshua Foer

 

Summary of  Moonwalking with Einstein|The Art and Science of Remembering Everything book by Joshua Foer


Author Joshua Foer met a man at a memory championship who could remember 50 thousand digits of pi. So, Joshua became interested in the science of memorization.

Socrates said:

"Writing destroys memory."

How?

The brain remembers things easily when they are repetitive. Before the invention of writing, people memorized things to transfer them to others.


You notice when you are trying to remember something, but it doesn't show up in consciousness. Somehow, when you go to a place, listen to music, or smell something, you exactly remember the forgotten thing. Memory is associated with that thing, and memory works this way.


For example, if you want to learn to type faster, type 10 or 20% faster than your current speed so that you make mistakes, and then you can identify what is slowing you down. There is no limit to speed; you can go above and beyond the sky.


Create a "memory palace." It can be a series of vivid or sexual images where you place all the things that need to be memorized.

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