The Constant: A History of Getting Things Wrong

By Heart, Part 2

Aug 12, 2025
Dive into the fascinating world of Scrabble, where casual play meets fierce competition, revealing deep connections between players. Explore the astounding memory of Nigel Richards, a multilingual Scrabble titan, and ponder the philosophical implications of knowledge and memory. Uncover the flaws of human memory, contrasting historical insights from Aristotle to Pliny. Discover legendary memory feats and the intriguing tale of Simonides that links criticism to creative memory techniques. Finally, unlock innovative mnemonic strategies that reshape our understanding of human potential.
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ANECDOTE

Nigel Richards’ Scrabble Domination

  • Nigel Richards' Scrabble dominance is illustrated through astonishing tournament wins and rare word plays like pernoctated.
  • Mark Kreisler contrasts his casual Scrabble with Richards to highlight extreme expertise and obsession.
INSIGHT

Memory Is Adaptive, Not Photographic

  • Memory is not a faithful archive but a system built to update, infer, and fill gaps rather than preserve precise details.
  • The episode reframes memory as adaptive and mutable, not photographic or perfectly faithful.
ANECDOTE

Luria’s Encounter With Sharoshevsky

  • Alexander Luria met Solomon Sharoshevsky who could repeat long passages verbatim and retain them for decades.
  • Luria tested him with digits and whole articles to confirm extraordinary recall abilities.
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