Fluffy
A fool
I am starting this topic because of my interest in Biblical Studies and at the moment that involves the tradition of passing on scripture through oral as opposed to written tradition. However, I am not so much concerned about the religious impact of this, hence why this is in general debates, but more the exact feats of memory that would be involved in such a process and whether these would be possible.
For my Latin GCSE, we had to memorise roughly 250 lines of English translation of Latin text (The Aeneid). This took us all many months of continuous repetition of the lines until we could finally do it without reference to the text. Throughout the whole of this time, we had access to the written English translation.
Now in a society without a written system, or at least one that was not well known enough by the majority of people, information would have to be passed down orally. Given that it appears to be impossible to do this 100% accurately without constant referral to a written copy, how much corruption do you think happens in the histories and laws that were passed down orally? If after a few generations, it is likely for an account to be corrupted beyond recognition, is there any worth in oral tradition compared with written tradition especially in today's society.
Do you think that eidetic memory is real or a myth? If it is real, do you think it occurs regularly enough to suggest that information can be passed through generations accurately with word of mouth alone?
Why do you think memory systems (eg the Mnemonic room system) work given that they appear to increase the amount of information the brain has to store?
For my Latin GCSE, we had to memorise roughly 250 lines of English translation of Latin text (The Aeneid). This took us all many months of continuous repetition of the lines until we could finally do it without reference to the text. Throughout the whole of this time, we had access to the written English translation.
Now in a society without a written system, or at least one that was not well known enough by the majority of people, information would have to be passed down orally. Given that it appears to be impossible to do this 100% accurately without constant referral to a written copy, how much corruption do you think happens in the histories and laws that were passed down orally? If after a few generations, it is likely for an account to be corrupted beyond recognition, is there any worth in oral tradition compared with written tradition especially in today's society.
Do you think that eidetic memory is real or a myth? If it is real, do you think it occurs regularly enough to suggest that information can be passed through generations accurately with word of mouth alone?
Why do you think memory systems (eg the Mnemonic room system) work given that they appear to increase the amount of information the brain has to store?