Page:Memory; how to develop, train, and use it - Atkinson - 1919.djvu/136

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CHAPTER XIII.

HOW TO REMEMBER PLACES.

There is a great difference in the various degrees of development of “the sense of locality” in different persons. But these differences may be traced directly to the degree of memory of that particular phase or faculty of the mind, which in turn depends upon the degree of attention, interest, and use which has been bestowed upon the faculty in question. The authorities on phrenology define the faculty of “locality” as follows: “Cognizance of place; recollection of the looks of places, roads, scenery, and the location of objects; where on a page ideas are to be found, and position generally; the geographical faculty; the desire to see places, and have the ability to find them.” Persons in whom this faculty is developed to the highest degree seem to have an almost intuitive idea of direction, place and position. They never get lost or “mixed up” regarding direction or

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