Memory development using special services methods
19.99 €
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The capabilities of the human brain are mind-boggling: it can cope with tasks that are beyond the capabilities of even the most modern computers. But this is true only if we train it regularly. If we get used to using “crutches” like organizers, navigators, notebooks, our memory weakens. If we do routine work day after day, if we overload our memory with information without filtering or systematizing it, our ability to concentrate, our perception, and our reaction speed deteriorate. You know all this yourself. The good news is that it is reversible. Memory can and should be trained. And the main profession for which excellent memory, clarity, and speed of thinking are vital is that of an intelligence officer.
An intelligence officer cannot take a photo of a train schedule or a secret operation plan on his phone; he does not have time to study piles of documents long and thoughtfully, and at the same time he must remember every last detail and clearly reproduce it at the right moment. Real, not movie-like, intelligence is not running around with a gun, but working with information. So why don't we use the developments of the special services in everyday life?
An intelligence officer cannot take a photo of a train schedule or a secret operation plan on his phone; he does not have time to study piles of documents long and thoughtfully, and at the same time he must remember every last detail and clearly reproduce it at the right moment. Real, not movie-like, intelligence is not running around with a gun, but working with information. So why don't we use the developments of the special services in everyday life?
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