友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!阅读过程发现任何错误请告诉我们,谢谢!! 报告错误
哔哔读书 返回本书目录 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 进入书吧 加入书签

the foundations of personality-第12章

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



ted with an uncertainty; a sense of unreality; that is almost agonizing。 As the effects of the poison wear off; which even in favorable cases takes months; the impressibility returns but never reaches normality again。 Unquestionably there is an inherent congenital difference in memory capacity。 There are people who are prodigies of memory as there are those who are prodigies of physical strength;and without training。 The IMPRESSIBILITY for memories can in no way be increased except through the stimulation of interest and a certain heightening of attention through emotion。 For the man or woman concerned with memory the first point of importance is to find some value in the fact or thing to be learned。 Before a subject is broached to students the teacher should make clear its practical and theoretic value to the students。 Too often that is the last thing done and it is only when the course is finished that its practical meaning is stressed or even indicated。 In fact; throughout; teaching the value of the subject should constantly be emphasized; if possible; by illustrations from life。 There are only a few who love knowledge for its own sake; but there are many who become eager for learning when it is made practical。 The number of associations given to a fact determines to a large extent its permanence in memory and the power of recalling it。 In my own teaching I always instruct my students in the technique of memorizing; as follows: 1。 Listen attentively; making only as many notes as necessary to recall the leading facts。 The auditory memories are thus given the first place。 2。 Go home and read up the subject in your textbooks; again making notes。 Thus is added the visual associations。 3。 Write out in brief form the substance of the lecture; deriving your knowledge from both the lecture and the book。 You thus add another set of associations to your memories of the subject。 4。 Teach the subject to or discuss it with a fellow student。 By this you vitalize the memories you have; you link them firmly together; you lend to them the ardor of usefulness and of victory。 You are forced to realize where the gaps; the lacunae of your knowledge come; and are made to fill them in。 Thus the best way to remember a fact is to find a use for it and to link it to your interests and your purposes。 Unrelated it has no value; related it becomes in fact a part of you。 After that the mechanics of memory necessitate the making of as many pathways to that fact as possible; and this means deliberately to associate the fact by sound; by speech and by action。 The advertised schemes of memory training are simply association schemes; old as the hills; and having value indeed; but too much is claimed for them。 A splendid memory is born; not made; but any memory; except where disease has entered; can be improved by training。 It is because lectures on the whole do not supply enough associations or arouse enough interest that the lecture is the poorest method of teaching or learning。 Man's mind sticks easily to things; but with difficulty to words about things。 To maintain attention for an hour or so; while sitting; is a task; and there develops a tendency either to a hypnoidal state in which the mind follows uncritically; or to a restless uneasiness with wandering mind and fatigue of body。 A demonstration; on the other hand; a laboratory experiment with short; personal instruction; a bodily contact with the problem calls into play interest; enthusiasm; curiosity; motor images; the use of the hands; and is THE method of teaching。 There are at present excellent psychological methods of testing out the memory capacity。 Every one engaged in any responsible work; or troubled about his memory; should be so tested。 While there are other qualities of mind of great importance; memory is basic; and no one can really understand himself who is in doubt about his memory。 In such diseases as neurasthenia one of the commonest complaints is the 〃loss of memory;〃 which greatly troubles the patient。 As a matter of fact; what is impaired is interest and attention; and when the patient realizes this he is usually quite relieved。 The man who has a poor memory may become very successful if he develops systems of recording; filing; indexing; but his possibilities of knowledge are greatly reduced by his defect。'1' '1' It is the growth of the subject matter of knowledge that makes necessary the elaborate systems of indexing; etc。; now so important。 It is as much as man can do to follow the places where the men work; let alone what they are doing。 This growth of knowledge is getting to be an extra…human phenomenon。 Of this Graham Wallas has written entertainingly。

A second fundamental ability of living tissue; and of particular importance in character; is habit formation。 Habit resides in the fact that once living tissue has been traversed by a stimulus and has responded by an act; three things result: 1。 The pathway for that stimulus becomes more permeable; becomes; as it were; grooved or like a track laid across the living structure of the nervous system。 2。 The responding element is more easily stirred into activity; responds with more vigor and with less effort。 3。 Consciousness; at first invoked; recedes more and more; until the habit…action of whatever type tends to become automatic。 There is in this last peculiarity a tendency for the habit to establish itself as independent of the personality; and if an injurious or undesired habit; to set up the worst of the conflicts of life;a conflict between one's intention and an automaton in the shape of a powerfully entrenched habit。 Habits are economical of thought and energy; generally speaking; that is their main recommendation。 A dozen examples present themselves at once as illustrative: piano playing; with its intense concentration on each note; with consciousness attending to the action of each muscle; and then practice; habit formation; and the ease and power of execution with the mind free to wander off in the moods suggested by the music; or to busy itself with improvisations; flourishes and the artistic touches。 Before true artistry can come; technique must be relegated to habit。 So with typewriting; driving an automobile; etc。 More fundamental than these; which are largely skill habits; are the organic habits。 One of the triumphs of pediatrics depends upon the realization that the baby's welfare hangs on regular habits of feeding; that he is not to be fed except at stated intervals; as a result processes of digestion are set going in a regular; harmonious manner。 In other words; these processes may be said to 〃get to know〃 what is expected of them and act accordingly。 The mother's time is economized and the strain of nursing is lessened。 In adults; regular hours of eating make it possible for the juices of digestion to be secreted as the food is ingested; in other words; an habitual adjustment takes place。 If there were one single health habit that I would have inculcated above all others; it would be the habit of regularly evacuating the bowels。 While constipation is not the worst ill in the world; it causes much trouble; annoyance and a considerable degree of ill health; and; in my opinion; a considerable degree of unhappiness。 A physician may be pardoned for frank advice: all the matters concerning the bowels; such as coarse foods; plenty of water and exercise; are secondary compared to the habit of going to the stool at the same time each day; whether there be desire or not。 A child should be trained in this matter as definitely as he is trained to brush his teeth。 In fact; I think that the former habit is more important than the latter。 The mood of man is remarkably related to the condition of his gastro…intestinal tract and the involuntary muscle of that tract is indirectly under the control of the will through habit formation。 Sleep'1' the mysterious; the death in life which we all seek each night; is likewise regulated by habit。 Arising from the need of relief from consciousness and bodily exertion; the mechanism of sleep is still not well understood。 Is there a toxic influence at work? is the body poisoned by itself; as it were; as has been postulated; is there a toxin of fatigue; or is there a 〃vaso…motor〃 reaction; a shif
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!