Page:Memory; how to develop, train, and use it - Atkinson - 1919.djvu/49

Rh be gone over in any order. In this way one may learn to repeat several hundred disconnected words or ideas in any order after hearing them only once.” We do not consider it necessary to argue in detail the fact that this system is artificial and cumbersome to a great degree. While the idea of “position” may be employed to some advantage in grouping together in the memory several associated facts, ideas, or words, still the idea of employing a process such as the above in the ordinary affairs of life is ridiculous, and any system based upon it has a value only as a curiosity, or a mental acrobatic feat.

Akin to the above is the idea underlying many other “systems,” and “secret methods”—the idea of Contiguity, in which words are strung together by fanciful connecting links. Feinagle describes this underlying idea, or principle, as follows: “The recollection of them is assisted by associating some idea of relation between the two; and as we find by experience that whatever is ludicrous is calculated to make a strong impression on the mind, the more ridiculous the association