We all have a subconscious part of the brain and a conscious one, though I believe the swanky terms are now something like System 1 and System 2. The really clever work is done by the subconscious part.
I had a good example of this a few weeks back. Unfortunately I can't remember the precise word, but I saw a two-syllable word on the side of a tradesman's van and said it in my mind's ear. I then stopped in surprise, because I realised I had read it with the stress on syllable B, whereas the word is usually pronounced with stress on syllable A. The reason was obvious as soon as I thought about it: it was a name, and we treat names differently. Now I don't recall ever being taught any relevant rule, or thinking about it, or imagining any situation where I would normally have it brought to my attention. I inferred therefore that, after years of hearing examples of trade names being pronounced differently from normal words, my subconscious brain had simply worked out the rule for itself and activated in this case. (We distinguish names from normal words in another subtle way - use capital letters or tamper with the spelling a little: Smith, Smythe, White, Whyte, Cook, Cooke, etc).
There are far better ways of illustrating the power of the subconscious brain (language in general, so that example is not really the point.
The real point is that many teachers already harness the power of the subconscious brain by making pupils take in masses of information through drills and repetition without explaining the whys and wherefores: activities like music and tennis, for example. After a while the right responses happen even in previously unseen situations. We know this method works.
The role of the conscious brain is limited to "will" - saying "I must do these drills tonight and not skip them even for a day, and if I really want to be good I must do a double dose."
There is good reason to believe this works in go, too, because this method is the one normally used in the Far East. Trying to understand the theory with your conscious brain first does not speed the process up. It interferes with the subconscious and so slows the process down. It may even be harmful. Think of trying to learn music by reading about the rules of harmony before you even plonk on your guitar, or how painful your progress is when you keep stopping your teacher to ask things like "should I say A sharp or B flat?".
That is not to say that theory has no place. I suspect it is useful as part of a later consolidation process. But mass absorption of fundamentals comes first.
In Oriental martial arts as taught to Orientals, the usual pattern is for a teacher to say "copy me" and then for pupils to do a move by imitation. Eventually a complete form is memorised. The subconscious has taken in all the data and sorted it in some suitable way so that it can be activated instantly - you can perform the move, though crudely. At that stage a typical westerner would think he knows the form and would ask to go on to the next stage. Teachers have to make a living and so unfortunately acquiesce. But in the traditional format, the pupil would not be allowed to ask. He would be told what to do next, and this would often be to repeat the same form, again and again, refining out the crudities. For example, the same moves would be repeated but with the proper breathing patterns now superimposed on it.
One advantage of this process is precisely that the fundamentals are repeated over and over again. The typical western pupil does not give anything like the same attention to fundamentals. In fact he is often unaware of what the fundamentals are. How many people here could write a few pages (as I have just seen) on the two-step hane or the crosscut, as opposed to giving just one or two examples of what they look like?
There are even fundamentals that haven't even made it into the ordinary western orbit. Yesterday, for example, I was struck by this example:
In each position, Black's reply to White's triangled peep is also shown triangled. The general rule is that when peeped at, you play on the side of the peep away from strength. If the opponent is strong on both sides of the peep, you play on the outside. You could be taught the wider theory that, when in the presence of strength, you must be prepared to sacrifice, etc. but your subconscious brain can do all that for you, perhaps more slowly but making hidden connections to other elements and creating analogies for other cases, so that the process becomes much more efficient. You can end up actually doing something useful, as opposed to answering an exam question by parroting what the teacher told you.
This example, incidentally, is due to Yasunaga Hajime who offers a wealth of such cases. I think I recall that he presented in English a few when he was involved with the original Go Monthly. This particular example is from a Japanese magazine, though, and is part of a disquisition on peeps. Obviously it is at a crude level and must be refined with further experience.
The relevance to the thread is this: if you forget about memorising pro games but simply play them over instead (though effortfully), your subconscious will memorise the bits that matter, and also sort them out for you in the most useful way, and in ways that will eventually surprise you. Magically, it will do the equivalent of realising when a word is name. The first step is to use your conscious brain, your will, to tell you to do the work. Later on it can play a further part by telling you to repeat the whole process so that you can refine your stored knowledge.
Although this does involve using the horrid word "work" to tell yourself to do something, playing over a game is surely much, much more enjoyable than trying to memorise every move. For that reason, it eludes me why this question of memorisation comes up so often.
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