MTU Cork Library Catalogue

Syndetics cover image
Image from Syndetics

Make the most of your mind / Tony Buzan.

By: Buzan, Tony.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: London : Pan Bks., 1988Description: 191 p. ; 19 cm. + pbk.ISBN: 0330302620.Subject(s): Intellect | Thought and thinking | Brain | SuccessDDC classification: 153.14
Contents:
Introduction -- Your Brain -- Your memory can be better than you think -- Listening -- Using and caring for your eyes -- Speed reading and effective reading -- Note-making and fast writing -- Creativity -- Numeracy -- Logic and analysis -- Family and group study.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
General Lending MTU Bishopstown Library Lending 153.14 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00016860
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

A straightforward and sensible handbook explaining clearly how your brain works and how you can use it more effectively.Your brain is like a sleeping giant - its potential is far greater than was generally imagined. Even the commonly heard statement that on average we use only one per cent of our brains may well be an overestimation. Tony Buzan, the leading expert in the field, sets out to help you develop that astounding untapped potential. Essential reading for anyone keen to learn, read, memorize and think more efficently, this classic bestseller explains clearly how your brain works and how to maximize its unrealized power.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 182-183) and index.

Introduction -- Your Brain -- Your memory can be better than you think -- Listening -- Using and caring for your eyes -- Speed reading and effective reading -- Note-making and fast writing -- Creativity -- Numeracy -- Logic and analysis -- Family and group study.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Kirkus Book Review

Purportedly, a marriage of nervous-system discoveries to self-help techniques in order to improve memory, logic, arithmetic skills, and more. The amount of neuroscience, however, would make a contemporary investigator blush--and when it's not wrong, it's ancient or distorted. The self-help is largely the borrowings of past efforts. For instance, mnemonics for numbers (one is a pen; two is a swan; three, breasts; four a sailboat); advice to group or chunk items in a list. Chapters on how to listen better and how to use your eyes. (Blink a lot, breathe regularly, rest your eyeballs now and then, and make sure your glasses are clean.) Fans of speed reading will find a condensed method (the visual guide or point system), as well as instructions on how to tackle a text for efficient comprehension. Of course, there is some sense here--of the kind one hopes is conveyed to school children in early grades: look at the table of contents, at pictures, at chapter-beginnings and -endings. The self-help culminates with improving arithmetic skills and learning everyday logic. Nothing wrong with the advice here, either: don't be duped by logical fallacies, question appeals to authorities, etc. Those who find it useful to learn how to multiply any number by 11 or 5, or how to subtract numbers from multiples of 10, will find these old tricks set forth. The pep index is high: follow Buzan's instructions and you'll supposedly become the smart, savvy, creative person you know you secretly are. Pop pap. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Powered by Koha