"Never memorize what you can look up..." - Quote by Albert Einstein
Never memorize what you can look up in a book.
More by Albert Einstein
“What counts can't always be counted; what can be counted doesn't always count.”
“Learning is the beginning of wealth. Searching and learning is where the miracle process all begins. The great breakthrough in your life comes when you realize it that you can learn anything you need to learn to accomplish any goal that you set for yourself. This means there are no limits on what you can be, have or do.”
“You ask me if I keep a notebook to record my great ideas. I've only ever had one.”
More on Knowledge
“It will contribute towards one's object, who wishes to acquire a facility in the gaining of knowledge, to doubt judiciously.”
“If a man knows the law, find out, though he live in a pine shanty, and resort to him. And if a man can pipe or sing, so as to wrap the imprisoned soul in an elysium; or can paint a landscape, and convey into souls and ochres all the enchantments of Spring or Autumn; or can liberate and intoxicate all people who hear him with delicious songs and verses; it is certain that the secret cannot be kept; the first witness tells it to a second, and men go by fives and tens and fifties to his doors.”
“The intellect is a cleaver; it discerns and rifts its way into the secrets of things.”
More on Learning
“Idleness and constancy fix the mind to what it finds easy and agreeable. This habit always confines and cramps up our knowledge; and no one has ever taken the trouble to stretch and carry his understanding as far as it could go.”
“College isn't the place to go for ideas.”
“If someone who wanted to learn to dance were to say: For centuries, one generation after the other has learned the positions, and it is high time that I take advantage of this and promptly begin with the quadrille--people would presumably laugh a little at him, but in the world of spirit this is very plausible. What, then, is education? I believed it is the course the individual goes through in order to catch up with himself, and the person who will not go through this course is not much helped by being born in the most enlightened age.”