The downside of the outboard brain
Clive Thompson writes on a phenomenon I think about constantly: if you really do start entrusting all your ephemeral memory work to external systems, might your wetware start to atrophy?
Apparently, yes:
This summer, neuroscientist Ian Robertson polled 3,000 people and found that the younger ones were less able than their elders to recall standard personal info. When Robertson asked his subjects to tell them a relative’s birth date, 87 percent of respondents over age 50 could recite it, while less than 40 percent of those under 30 could do so. And when he asked them their own phone number, fully one-third of the youngsters drew a blank. They had to whip out their handsets to look it up.
Haha, big joke, right? Not for me. Between me and TextExpander, only one of us knows my new VoIP number by heart. Without TE to paste it anywhere on command? Yep, I’d have to look up my own phone number. Sad.
But, Clive goes on:
My point is that the cyborg future is here. Almost without noticing it, we’ve outsourced important peripheral brain functions to the silicon around us.
And frankly, I kind of like it. I feel much smarter when I’m using the Internet as a mental plug-in during my daily chitchat…
And, in closing…
At the very least, I’d like to be able to remember my own phone number.
Now thinking that’s something I might want to work on too.
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Mnemonic devices
It isn't a contradiction to learn from The David And His Teachings but still value this wetware you speak of.
The Greek orators had a system for memorization, Method of Loci, which was pretty damn amazing.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Method_of_loci
I can probably still list all of the songs on Elvis Costello's first six albums in order and have no idea what my phone number is.
Of course I had the albums on vinyl, so I might switch up the A and B sides, but that is another digression.