Skynetmain wrote:
tymaporer wrote:
... Some people say numbers should be just as easy as words, but have any of them ever tried memorizing thousands of words in a specific order? I don't mean any of this negatively, by the way.
Also not meaning any negativity.
Some actors memorize entire Shakespeare plays, so word memorization is not uncommon. I think (as a math and science person) that it is more impressive to memorize the plays. I also think it is funner to listen to as well.
Yay all arts! From acting to science!
I don't think you can really compare memorising a Shakespeare play to learning eight thousand, or forty thousand digits of Pi.
While both are very amazing feats, the forty thousand digits of Pi, have
no meaning, at all to the person reciting it, unless the person has some sort of special relationship with each number. I.E, 3 is for the number of siblings I have, 1 is for.. 4 is for... et cetera.
A play by Shakespeare is slightly different. Everyone (who has read the play) knows that Mercutio's line of "A plague o'both your houses! I am sped." comes after Abraham's line of "Do you bite at us, sir?", and Sampson's reply is always going to be "I do bite my thumb, sir." and it'll never be a different way.
Memorising Romeo & Juliet and memorising Pi are
slightly different but still amazing feats in their own way. Reciting Romeo & Juliet from memory more interesting. Also, it's more likely to produce more meaningful comments from peers/teachers because they can relate to Romeo & Juliet in way, rather than Pi, which is just a long sequence of numbers.