Page:Memory; how to develop, train, and use it - Atkinson - 1919.djvu/65

Rh says: “The permanence of the impression which anything leaves on the memory, is proportionate to the degree of attention which was originally given to it.” Thompson says: “The experiences most permanently impressed upon consciousness are those upon which the greatest amount of attention has been fixed.” Beattie says: “The force wherewith anything strikes the mind is generally in proportion to the degree of attention bestowed upon it. The great art of memory is attention Inattentive people have always bad memories.” Kay says: “It is generally held by philosophers that without some degree of attention no impression of any duration could be made on the mind, or laid up in the memory.” Hamilton says: “It is a law of the mind that the intensity of the present consciousness determines the vivacity of the future memory; memory and consciousness are thus in the direct ratio of each other. Vivid consciousness, long memory; faint consciousness, short memory; no consciousness, no memory An act of attention, that is an act of concentration,