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August 30th, 2002, 04:25 PM
#11
Originally posted here by imaginedsanity
If you really contemplate the question.....you may realize you already learn in your sleep. Although the problem is you don't necessarily learn what you wish to learn. As you probably know, you have multiple dreams in your deepest state of sleep, and these dreams are things you've either never experienced before, or a contorted version of reality. So in all truth, your brain is probably at it's most creative state while you're asleep. I've written a few of my works based upon images I've created while I was asleep. I know this doesn't really help you learn math, but maybe it will help you specialize your hopes in learning, so as to refine your gest, and produce the greatest results.
I agree. I have been stuck with logical issues with programs that I've written in the past. When this happens I find it is good to step away from the problem and let the subconcious (sp?) work on it. This might involve a night of sleep or just diverting my attention to something else -ie a movie. While, dream state learning might not yet be possible sub-concious problem sloving does work. It is very much like not finding the object your looking for until you stop looking.
Cheers,
-D
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August 30th, 2002, 04:41 PM
#12
Junior Member
i dont knwo how you would do it but be carefull what you learn .. i mean its like a comuter hard drive cept you cant delete data that you learn.. ya knwo what im sayin..
wish you the best of luck tho...
melissa
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August 30th, 2002, 04:49 PM
#13
That is how I passed History in high school. I flunked the first semester. The second semester I would record the chapter before a test and set it to play at 4am. I passed with a C. I don't know if that is proof but....
Work... Some days it's just not worth chewing through the restraints... 
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August 30th, 2002, 04:57 PM
#14
Actually Melissa you can delete information from your mind. I've successfully erased the majority of my childhood from memory, so it can be done, but doing so can be dangerous.
The radiance of ignorace in a world of nothingness and all of this time your pestilence has created nothing but uselessness
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August 30th, 2002, 05:33 PM
#15
rm -rf /dev/brain
so true...
the problem is not deleteing to much...
as soon as you start useing the rm function, it soon becomes a rm -rf function..
then you start to forget more and more, in a downward spiral of regrett..
ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI.
When in Russia, pet a PETSCII.
Get your ass over to SLAYRadio the best station for C64 Remixes !
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