Is it possible to make a memory palace of the White House, even without ever been there?
In short: Yes. Stay tuned this week-end!
For some reason, the idea of someone being able to visualize the rooms, layout, and the objects of a gigantic house, like a palace, seems almost unbelievable. It is difficult to belive that someone could, say, know the contents and the layout of 100 rooms, and attach other objects, "virtual" objects as it were, to these "real" objects, and thereby create a databank of keywords. Keywords that will trigger whatever you want to memorize.
Take the White House, for instance.
This is a house filled with rooms. Which means you can store an awful lot of objects. Imaghine if you know the house intiumately. Just by working there you will be able to assimilate the layout, and set it up mentally and use it as a memory palace. There ar ...
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Sjur is the author of "How to Build a Memory Palace", and the discussion continues here. Including some bonus material that was left out of the book. This (Locals.com) is both a way to support an independent creator, but also to get your hands on ...
Post coming up today on exactly how to extend The Major System...check back a little later.
As mentioned in a few earlier posts I've recently had the idea of extending the Major System.
The Major System is one of the first systems of mnemonic we learn when starting. And it's a brilliant system as it can turn numbers into words, which in turn can be words that are easily visualizable so that we can use them to represent the keywords we wish to remember.
But the second use of The Major system has gone largely unused. And it has to do with using it as a memory palace with its pegs.
In The Major System, each number from one to one hundred is an object that is easily visualized. Each number represents a consonant/phoneme, and words are made accordingly.
By linking one of these numbers to an object representing a keyword you want to remember, you've created a mini memory palace.
The "room" is the number. By linking it (in a mnemonic visualization) to the object representing the number, you've created a mnemonic structure that is easy to recall. By learning all objects from one to one...