by SamGurney » Sep 12th, '10, 23:54
Fair point. The difficulty is that I believe you can definatley speed your reading up, but it is impossible to name a limit on 'reasonable' reading speed. Nonetheless, there are certain unignorable correlates; the more you read, the quicker you can read; I am sure you will find that proffesors read much quicker on average than most people. And, beyond one's own reasonable reading speed (Reasonable not neccesserily meaning the speed at which one usually reads), the faster you read, the less you understand.
My 'bluriness' analogy was more designed to make the point that you wouldn't watch a film on fastforward x10 if you were a film student, would you? It stops being just about being able to appreciate the artistic merits of the film, you actually miss key events! You have to look at a piece of art and think about it- you cannot rush those thoughts and it is the speed of your thought which determines how long you should take. Thus, The less thought, the quicker.
Following on from this, you might then expect that people who prefer to think and question and analyse information read slower than those interested in simply 'learning' information. Beyond individual variation sometimes the enviroment will determine speed. The equation 'E=mc2' takes less than half a second to read in only one 'fixation' and is quite easy to remember. Find me someone who can look at that and understand the implications of that equation in less than half a second and I will punch myself in the face.
It all comes down to thought and to being used to reading.
So what can I conclude? Well, I am neither crediting or discrediting speed reading, I am merely making the case for looking beyond 'magic' methods and systems and just using common sense.
It's a bit like nlp. The fundamental premise of 'modelling'- observing what causes desired effects and replicating the causes to create the effect- is an intuitive piece of information that even babies understand. Does this mean that the whole of NLP is 'right' or realistic? No, it doesn't. It means you have to assess the individual parts and claims of NLP on their own, not as an entire system where some truths make all of it correct.
Last edited by
SamGurney on Sep 13th, '10, 16:50, edited 1 time in total.
''To go wrong in one's own way is better than to go right in another's.'' Dostoevsky's Razumihin.