Doru Castaian

Doru Castaian’s Followers (14)

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Doru Castaian



Average rating: 4.21 · 497 ratings · 53 reviews · 17 distinct worksSimilar authors
Shutter Island

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4.13 avg rating — 221,616 ratings — published 2003 — 194 editions
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Copilul 44

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4.11 avg rating — 89,351 ratings — published 2008 — 189 editions
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Cum se citeste o carte: ghi...

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3.98 avg rating — 27,465 ratings — published 1940 — 168 editions
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Povestea filosofiei: Viețil...

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4.15 avg rating — 17,885 ratings — published 1926 — 269 editions
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Cine conduce lumea?

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4.05 avg rating — 12,223 ratings — published 2014 — 74 editions
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Triumful orașului: Cum ne f...

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3.91 avg rating — 6,341 ratings — published 2011 — 47 editions
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Cum să fii dictator: cultul...

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3.69 avg rating — 2,720 ratings — published 2019 — 35 editions
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Stoicismul și arta de a tră...

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4.13 avg rating — 2,142 ratings — published 2013 — 12 editions
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Cum și de ce (mai) educăm?

4.44 avg rating — 18 ratings — published 2018 — 2 editions
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Despre ce ne apropie și ce ...

4.40 avg rating — 5 ratings
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Quotes by Doru Castaian  (?)
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“Perhaps the most exasperating cliche is about children being forced to memorize, not think. But memorization is not an abomination in itself, though the mnemic pressure on our species has dropped. Memorization is, de facto, exercise for the mind. Neuroscience shows an active hippocampus stimulates cerebral activity. We have often observed how the most profound and creative pupils are those who know the most things, though their usefulness is not always apparent. No question is more insinuating stupid than 'What good will it do to me?' In certain teaching contexts, it is not wrong to ask pupils to memorize. While it is not the only goal the idea that memorizing is useless since information is available online is also wrong and falsely self-obvious. It denotes a misunderstanding of how our mind works. Our brains are not computers, our memory can't be replaced by external HDDs. Each piece of info we memorize is integrated, albeit minimally, as living memory is active, while digital memory is passive. Strange as some may find it, memorizing can stimulate thinking as few other things can. What impairs thinking is the lack of the habit to reflect, the custom of stopping our mind's flow to go back to what we've learned.”
Doru Căstăian

“Perhaps the most exasperating cliche is about children being forced to memorize, not think. But memorization is not an abomination in itself, though the anemic pressure on our species has dropped. Memorization is, de facto, exercise for the mind. Neuroscience shows an active hippocampus stimulates cerebral activity. We have often observed how the most profound and creative pupils are those who know the most things, though their usefulness is not always apparent. No question is more insinuating stupid than 'What good will it do to me?' In certain teaching contexts, it is not wrong to ask pupils to memorize. While it is not the only goal the idea that memorizing is useless since information is available online is also wrong and falsely self-obvious. It denotes a misunderstanding of how our mind works. Our brains are not computers, our memory can't be replaced by external HDDs. Each piece of info we memorize is integrated, albeit minimally, as living memory is active, while digital memory is passive. Strange as some may find it, memorizing can stimulate thinking as few other things can. What impairs thinking is the lack of the habit to reflect, the custom of stopping our mind's flow to go back to what we've learned.”
Doru Căstăian



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