Richard Osterland now has a memory system, based on Harry Lorrayne's system, to memorize the BCS. That way you have the advantages of using BCS as well as that of a memorized deck

Moderators: nickj, Lady of Mystery, Mandrake, bananafish, support
nickj wrote:Which of Aronson's many publications do the worthy members here feel contains the most information on this stack
Surely memorising the BCS completely removes the point of having it in the first place?
Don't get me wrong. I really love the BCS and use it a lot. It's just that it's such a pain to set up (I'm a lazy b****r) that I hate it being destroyed as part of a performance. With a Si Stebbins, I don't give a hoot...
bananafish wrote:Surely memorising the BCS completely removes the point of having it in the first place?
Nick. I agree with you on the grounds that if you are going to remember a memorised deck you have no need for that deck to be part of a stack as everything you could do with a stack you could do with a memorised deck (but not the other way around).
I guess the only advantage of memorising a stack is simply that if you ever forgot part of it you have a solid means of remembering, but in my opinion a memorised deck is really all or nothing.
Strictly speaking a stack is any pre-arrangement of the cards. A memorized deck is by definition a stacked deck. What you are talking about is the difference between a stack derived from a formula (or algorithm or whatever word you like) - such as BCS & Stebbins - and a stack that cannot be simply calculated, so must be memorized.
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