登陆注册
15399000000004

第4章

We need not examine a series of which the beginning and end lie far apart, in order to see how (by recollection) we remember; one in which they lie near one another will serve equally well. For it is clear that the method is in each case the same, that is, one hunts up the objective series, without any previous search or previous recollection. For (there is, besides the natural order, viz. the order of the pralmata, or events of the primary experience, also a customary order, and) by the effect of custom the mnemonic movements tend to succeed one another in a certain order. Accordingly, therefore, when one wishes to recollect, this is what he will do: he will try to obtain a beginning of movement whose sequel shall be the movement which he desires to reawaken. This explains why attempts at recollection succeed soonest and best when they start from a beginning (of some objective series). For, in order of succession, the mnemonic movements are to one another as the objective facts (from which they are derived). Accordingly, things arranged in a fixed order, like the successive demonstrations in geometry, are easy to remember (or recollect) while badly arranged subjects are remembered with difficulty.

Recollecting differs also in this respect from relearning, that one who recollects will be able, somehow, to move, solely by his own effort, to the term next after the starting-point. When one cannot do this of himself, but only by external assistance, he no longer remembers (i.e. he has totally forgotten, and therefore of course cannot recollect). It often happens that, though a person cannot recollect at the moment, yet by seeking he can do so, and discovers what he seeks. This he succeeds in doing by setting up many movements, until finally he excites one of a kind which will have for its sequel the fact he wishes to recollect. For remembering (which is the condicio sine qua non of recollecting) is the existence, potentially, in the mind of a movement capable of stimulating it to the desired movement, and this, as has been said, in such a way that the person should be moved (prompted to recollection) from within himself, i.e. in consequence of movements wholly contained within himself.

But one must get hold of a starting-point. This explains why it is that persons are supposed to recollect sometimes by starting from mnemonic loci. The cause is that they pass swiftly in thought from one point to another, e.g. from milk to white, from white to mist, and thence to moist, from which one remembers Autumn (the 'season of mists'), if this be the season he is trying to recollect.

It seems true in general that the middle point also among all things is a good mnemonic starting-point from which to reach any of them. For if one does not recollect before, he will do so when he has come to this, or, if not, nothing can help him; as, e.g. if one were to have in mind the numerical series denoted by the symbols A, B, G, D, E, Z, I, H, O. For, if he does not remember what he wants at E, then at Ehe remembers O; because from E movement in either direction is possible, to D or to Z. But, if it is not for one of these that he is searching, he will remember (what he is searching for) when he has come to G if he is searching for H or I. But if (it is) not (for Hor I that he is searching, but for one of the terms that remain), he will remember by going to A, and so in all cases (in which one starts from a middle point). The cause of one's sometimes recollecting and sometimes not, though starting from the same point, is, that from the same starting-point a movement can be made in several directions, as, for instance, from G to I or to D. If, then, the mind has not (when starting from E) moved in an old path (i.e. one in which it moved first having the objective experience, and that, therefore, in which un-'ethized' phusis would have it again move), it tends to move to the more customary; for (the mind having, by chance or otherwise, missed moving in the 'old' way) Custom now assumes the role of Nature. Hence the rapidity with which we recollect what we frequently think about. For as regular sequence of events is in accordance with nature, so, too, regular sequence is observed in the actualization of kinesis (in consciousness), and here frequency tends to produce (the regularity of) nature. And since in the realm of nature occurrences take place which are even contrary to nature, or fortuitous, the same happens a fortiori in the sphere swayed by custom, since in this sphere natural law is not similarly established.

Hence it is that (from the same starting-point) the mind receives an impulse to move sometimes in the required direction, and at other times otherwise, (doing the latter) particularly when something else somehow deflects the mind from the right direction and attracts it to itself. This last consideration explains too how it happens that, when we want to remember a name, we remember one somewhat like it, indeed, but blunder in reference to (i.e. in pronouncing) the one we intended.

Thus, then, recollection takes place.

But the point of capital importance is that (for the purpose of recollection) one should cognize, determinately or indeterminately, the time-relation (of that which he wishes to recollect). There is,-let it be taken as a fact,-something by which one distinguishes a greater and a smaller time; and it is reasonable to think that one does this in a way analogous to that in which one discerns (spacial)magnitudes. For it is not by the mind's reaching out towards them, as some say a visual ray from the eye does (in seeing), that one thinks of large things at a distance in space (for even if they are not there, one may similarly think them); but one does so by a proportionate mental movement. For there are in the mind the like figures and movements (i.e. 'like' to those of objects and events).

同类推荐
  • Culture and Anarchy

    Culture and Anarchy

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Absentee

    The Absentee

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 新编诸宗教藏总录

    新编诸宗教藏总录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 俱舍论记

    俱舍论记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Penguin Island

    Penguin Island

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 云天之约

    云天之约

    一座通天塔连接着天地。天上之人,天空之城,显得如此神秘。地上之人,天魂大陆,显得如此渺小。历经千险,来到天空之城,眼前的一切,显得如此的不真实!一切尽在这个孩子和父亲的约定之中!
  • 倒流时光与你相约

    倒流时光与你相约

    (此文已暂停更新)手工戒指DIY工坊?我怎么会来这里,嘶,头又痛了,这到底有什么牵挂着我的心?她是失忆少女,他是逗比少年,他们之间会擦出什么样的火花?什么?!人家早已相爱?!与你相约在回忆,我,在回忆等你。
  • 燕子要高飞

    燕子要高飞

    生活中,有太多的人和事总是在干扰着我,为了寻找到我迷失梦。在此特写人生,写给每一个和我一样的年轻人,在这路上,多一份坚持,多一份快乐,加油,我相信我可以。
  • 一见侵心:老公大人不好追

    一见侵心:老公大人不好追

    如果有人问,“楚纤云,你为什么那爱钱!”她会这样答,“如果你有一万块,你就可以保住你的手指,如果你有五万块,你可以保住你的脸,如果你有十万块,你还能活着叫妈妈……如果你有一百万,那么你就有了婚姻的自主权!”他投其所好,十万一顿早餐,二百万帮一个忙,一亿一个视频,看他如何一步步地让她入局!
  • 异界之数码暴龙召唤师

    异界之数码暴龙召唤师

    李望星,一个碌碌无为的打工仔,因为一次罕见的九星连珠的天象,导致他穿越到了一个和地球一样的平行世界---兽神星。兽神星,是一个不可思议的星球,这里的环境和地球差不多,同样有着高大的山峰,蔚蓝的天空,波涛汹涌的海洋。这里除了有着人类,还有着一种不可思议的幻兽。幻兽师,是兽神星上的人类和幻兽在生活中逐渐一种可以和幻兽订契约诞生的一人类。经历了漫长的时间,现在的兽神星上百分之九十九的人类都可以成为幻兽师,只有百分之一的人类是成为不了幻兽师。很不幸,穿越过来的李望星就是那百分之一的人类,不能成为幻兽师的他,在兽神星的命运将会如何。
  • 爸妈助考不添乱

    爸妈助考不添乱

    每年的高考不仅仅承载着莘莘学子们的梦想,也牵动着千千万万父母的心——终日为营养食谱犯愁,担心孩子的学习成绩下降而失眠,奔走呼号于各大高考招生咨询会之间……真的,身为家长,总是希望能够在孩子面临人生第一次大挑战时,尽自己全部所能助其一臂之力。这种心情我非常理解。但是我们完全没有必要也患上“高考综合征”,盲目地着急,过分地担忧,导致手足无措,这只能也必将给孩子带来许多额外的困扰。这也正是作者把《爸妈助考不添乱》这本书奉献给大家的原因。
  • 绝色归来:傲世小毒后

    绝色归来:傲世小毒后

    前世,他苦苦哀求:“你就不能为我自私一回吗?”她却说:“有人间,才有你我,如果我能有来生,定为你而自私...”说罢,救世涅槃,渐渐消散,他废了万年功力,保她魂魄......万年后,她强势归来,一妖孽在她身后缠着,她暴怒:“我不就骂了你几句吗!?至于这样跟着我?!”他却邪邪一笑:“我上得厅堂下得厨房玄力无边武功高强还会暖床,买我不贵,一个吻,和一颗真爱我的心...”“...”
  • 北辰演义

    北辰演义

    荆北辰经历事业的失败,亲人的逝去,妻子的背叛,他选择了毁灭。上帝为他打开了新的一扇门今世今生他又何去何从。
  • 锦鸿嫡女之娘子别想逃

    锦鸿嫡女之娘子别想逃

    有几个附近高房价和国际化房交会国际化风格反对广泛
  • 游神仙记

    游神仙记

    本书主要写一个富家大少爷子龙想成为神游的弟子,于是放着大少爷的生活不过,带上自己最忠实的伙伴小帅上了神游山。经过神游的一番考验过后他们终于成为了神游的弟子。过后他又会遇上怎样的事故,在他的身上又会发生怎样的纠葛,爱恨情仇,悲欢离合,他将如何面对这一切。(纯属虚构如有雷同纯属巧合)