History, asked by parthbhattpb123, 4 months ago

Why should books be learnt by heart?​

Answers

Answered by ridaarshadjavedchadh
1

Answer:

Significant cognitive benefits can be gained from learning by rote. Learning by heart benefits the hippocampal foundation, the 'memory' area of the brain. It can also give you insight into the piece you're learning – a rhyme you hadn't seen, a phrase that resonates with you.

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Answered by dram63
2

Answer:

Books should not be learnt by heart as per my opinion ....

As learn something by heart means that you have understood it before committing it to memory, whereas the similar phrase to learn something by rote often means to memorise without understanding.

A student who has to write a story feels much relieved when he understands that he can mobilize his knowledge instead of complying to the tyranny of imagination. And he will eventually invent deeper, more interesting and more original stories. In realilty, creative people are able to cross effectively a large variety of sources, with logic and deep feelings.

There is no contradiction at all between memory and intelligence. Only bad teachers can introduce an artificial contradiction. It works in both ways. Rote memorization as the sole way to learn is just doing half the job. Despising memorization because of the excess of rote memorization is building out of thin air. It achieves nothing in the long run. It’s like having a good recipe but no ingredients. You need to feed the spirit in a very concrete way, with stories, with legends, with facts. To memorise something perfectly, so that it can be written, recited or performed without thinking .

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