Have I already written about Joshua Foer’s book, Moonwalking with Einstein? I can’t remember. But then again, I don’t need to remember because this blog site remembers for me. Foer’s fascinating book is subtitled The Art and Science of Remembering Everything. Foer, a journalist, is well equipped to write such a book because in his reporting of the unusual world of memory athletes, he not only learns the techniques of championship memory challenges but wins the USA Memory Championship.
Memory Championship? Really? Yes, you could look it up on the Google memory machine. Practitioners of the ancient art of memory gather annually and compete in several areas of memory challenges. This is safe to try at home. Shuffle of deck of cards, display them one by one and give yourself five minutes to memorize them and then name them in order. Give yourself twenty minutes to memorize hundreds of random numbers and then write them out. In order. Give yourself fifteen minutes to memorize one hundred names and place them with the correct faces. And what is said to be the hardest and most dread challenge, take fifteen minutes to memorize a long poem of several pages that has never been seen by anyone and repeat it exactly as written.
Probably you can’t remember your brother’s cellphone number and certainly could not give the address and phone number of your physician. Nobody needs to anymore; we all have cellphones who do the memory challenges for us. Cellphones are the world champion mnemonists. The ancient arts of memorizing that were taught by Greek and Roman scholars are largely forgotten, not by the advent of cellphones but by literacy itself. If you can read the Odyssey, why should anyone memorize it?
Homer’s Odyssey and Iliad were recorded and served as a kind of foundational text by the time of Pericles’ Golden Age of Greek thought and learning. Some scholars maintain that the work of Homer shows such consistency, brilliance, and creativity that must have been put into writing by one exceptional man. However, there is no doubt that the poems have all the hallmarks of an oral tradition. That is, they were memorized and performed before an audience. In the early part of the 20th century, literacy was not prevalent in some parts of Europe. Milman Parry and Albert Lord of Harvard traveled to Bosnia and recorded and transcribed the oral stories and poetry recited by local bards. The work of Parry and Lord helped to define the techniques of oral epic poetry. The poetry of Homer and other epic poems are characterized by a formulaic structure. Standardized phrases such as “the wine-dark sea” and “rosy-fingered dawn” help to carry the poem along in a recitation. Formulaic phrases along with other conventions including meter, alliteration, episodic structure and other standardized techniques aid the performer’s memory. These same techniques are evident in Beowulf and other ancient heroic poetry.
And now there is an 11 hour long DVD of a man reciting—from memory—the over 10,000 lines of John Milton’s Paradise Lost. Why John Basinger would do such a thing I just don’t know. When I went for some long walks, I listened to an audio of Paradise Lost but apparently, I didn’t walk nearly enough to get too far into the epic or too high up Pinnacle Rock. According to Prof. John Seamon of Wesleyan (in an online course I took on Coursera) Basinger would memorize parts of Milton’s work while on his exercise machines. It took him nine years and he got it exactly right and probably is in very good physical condition. According to Seamon, the memorization done by actors is not done by rote repetition. Actors say that they try to mentally enter the person of the character they portray and look for meaning of the lines, not just the words of the lines. Actors “encode” their parts by understanding the meaning of their part, committing themselves to the emotion and forming a deep empathy with the character. Seamon interviewed Basinger who told him “During the incessant repetition of Milton’s words, I really began to listen to them, and every now and then as the whole poem began to take shape in my mind, an insight would come, an understanding, a delicious possibility.”
It is safe to try this technique at home as well. With some difficulty I am able to memorize poems of a few stanzas, certainly not poetry of epic length. The technique of recall by meaning does work but not as well as the ancient method of the Memory Palace.
The Memory Palace, or Method of Loci, is a technique useful in memorizing list of things. Physicians who examine Medicare (elderly!) patients are encouraged to give a simple test of cognitive ability in order to detect the possibility of incipient dementia in the patient. The recent defeated president made a claim of high “mental stamina” by having successfully repeated five words. Person, woman, man, camera, TV. Truthfully, anyone can remember much longer lists of words by simply taking a walk, that is, taking a mental walk through a “memory palace.”
In ancient Greek and Roman times and in the Middle Ages memorization was highly valued and taught to students as a fundamental skill for learning and speaking. Scholars studied the techniques of memory by consulting works on this skill by the Romans Cicero, Quintilian, and Giordano Bruno. Thomas Aquinas wrote a treatise on memory. Foer writes that memory champions still study Rhetorica ad Herrennium. This guide to memorization and rhetoric was written by an anonymous author in the first century BCE. Herrennium records the techniques of Simonides. According to Cicero, Simonides of Creos invented the Memory Palace after a tragedy. Simonides was a Greek poet and rhetorician who taught in the 5th century BCE. The story goes that Simonides was invited to a dinner party to give a recitation. After he recited his poetry he stepped outside to talk to friends. A terrible earthquake struck and destroyed the building burying the dinner party guests. He helped families to recover and identify their crushed loved ones by pointing out where each participant was seated at the table. Simonides reconstructed in his mind the room and its table and where each person sat. He could identify each body by recalling the loci, each location or place in the Memory Palace.
Psychologists who study memory say that familiar places are very easy to remember by forming a picture in the mind especially of a familiar place. At each of the loci, an item to be recalled is placed, and then one takes a walk through “palace” and observing each item. Here is how it works: Perhaps you have a shopping list. You think of your own home trying to imagine each room as you walk through. The front door is opened by a farmer in big boots holding a gallon of milk. As you enter you see on a small table in a carton of a dozen eggs. At the stairway stands the Frankenstein monster holding a package of AA batteries shooting electricity. The people are not as important as the places but it helps to have highly memorable persons in the rooms to help form memorable pictures. Joshua Foer likes to imagine a naked woman; that one is not forgettable. Or try a person, perhaps Einstein doing the moonwalk (thus the unforgettable title of Foer’s book). The Memory Palace is a sure-fire method to easily remember a list of items. Master the Method of Loci and you will easily pass the five-item dementia test your family physician will give when you reach Medicare age. In that way you can delay the time an assisted living facility will serve as your memory palace. Personally, I always decline to take the test. Because who knows?
The use of imaginative and striking images is also the way Foer learned to remember the names of people he meets. Everyone I know has trouble remembering names, but of course we all have cellphones to remember for us. Foer explains that part of the difficulty with names is explained by the Baker/baker Paradox. A psychologist shows two people the same photograph of a face. To one subject she says the name of the person is Baker. To the other, she says the person is a baker. Sometime later the person who associates the face with the occupation baker is much more likely to remember it than the person who tries to recall the name Baker. It takes a long time and many encounters to associate a name with the person, but a shortcut is to create a memorable image based on the name. One of Foer’s mentors said he could imagine Joshua Foer “joshing me…and I’d imagine my self breaking into four pieces…”
This useful and, well, memorable book is about Joshua Foer’s adventure into memory contests and his remarkable development of a world class memory. Foer does not much dwell on what is most important about memory itself, the real meaning of Memory itself, its fundamental importance, its telos, its true value. Foer’s book does have interesting information about some of the strange characteristics of long-term memory. Many severe types of forgetfulness include the loss of only short-term memory while the distant past may be able to be recalled. The passage of time, the processes of sleep, even light and day have dramatic effects on memory and sometimes what is recalled about the past can change and shape-shift over time. However, the book generally deals with memory improvement, memory tricks of the trade, and Joshua Foer’s remarkable improvement in memory.
Nonetheless, Joshua Foer is aware of the centrality of memory to everyone and to our basic humanity and he makes clear that memory and its improvement is no game show. Philosophers recognize that it is memory that creates and shapes selfhood. What are we without our memories, the things we have learned and the experiences that have shaped us? The philosopher Peter Singer, who has defined “personhood” to include humans and all manner of sentient animals, places memory at the center of selfhood, along with the cognizance of self, the avoidance of pain and death, and the desire for a future. We are built of our memories. Foer mentions a man known to science as EP who has completely lost his memory and thus cannot “place himself in time or space, or relative to other people.” Another man, Gordon Bell, is digitizing everything about himself and everything he hears and does into a computer bank in order to externalize memory. But this is a vain escape from the fundamental meaning of memory and selfhood. Foer thinks that we should cultivate memory because human action depends on memory. “Our memories make us who we are. They are the seat of our values and source of our character.” He says that his journey into the world of memory challenges is not about party tricks but “it’s about nurturing something profoundly and essentially human.” And there is this from the writer Haruki Murakami: “People’s memories are maybe the fuel they burn to stay alive.”