Hermann Ebbinghaus Quotes
By Alan Reiner – July 18, 2024
‘Mental events, it is said, are not passive happenings but the acts of a subject.’ – Hermann Ebbinghaus
‘A poem is learned by heart and then not again repeated. We will suppose that after a half year it has been forgotten: no effort of recollection is able to call it back again into consciousness.’ – Hermann Ebbinghaus
‘Mental states of every kind, – sensations, feelings, ideas, – which were at one time present in consciousness and then have disappeared from it, have not with their disappearance absolutely ceased to exist.’ – Hermann Ebbinghaus
‘Sensorial perception, for example, certainly occurs with greater or less accuracy according to the degree of interest; it is constantly given other directions by the change of external stimuli and by ideas.’ – Hermann Ebbinghaus
‘No matter how thoroughly a person may have learned the Greek alphabet, he will never be in a condition to repeat it backwards without further training.’ – Hermann Ebbinghaus
‘Meanwhile the fact that the connection with the activity of memory in ordinary life is for the moment lost is of less importance than the reverse, namely, that this connection with the complications and fluctuations of life is necessarily still a too close one.’ – Hermann Ebbinghaus
‘On the basis of the familiar experience that that which is learned with difficulty is better retained, it would have been safe to prophesy such an effect from the greater number of repetitions.’ – Hermann Ebbinghaus
‘The school-boy doesn’t force himself to learn his vocabularies and rules altogether at night, but knows that be must impress them again in the morning.’ – Hermann Ebbinghaus
‘Ideas which have been developed simultaneously or in immediate succession in the same mind mutually reproduce each other, and do this with greater ease in the direction of the original succession and with a certainty proportional to the frequency with which they were together.’ – Hermann Ebbinghaus
‘Often, even after years, mental states once present in consciousness return to it with apparent spontaneity and without any act of the will; that is, they are reproduced involuntarily.’ – Hermann Ebbinghaus