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78 galton.org
78 
Inquiries into Human Faculty
I have to the last failed in anticipating the character of the answers that my
friends would give to my inquiries, judging from my previous knowledge
of them; though I am bound to say that, having received their answers, I
could usually persuade myself that they were justified by my recollections
of their previous sayings and conduct generally.
The faculty is undoubtedly useful in a high degree to inventive
mechanicians, and the great majority of those whom I have questioned
have spoken of their powers as very considerable. They invent their
machines as they walk, and see them in height, breadth, and depth as real
objects, and they can also see them in action. In fact, a periodic action of
any kind appears to be easily recalled. But the powers of other men are
considerably less; thus an engineer officer who has himself great power of
visual memory, and who has superintended the mathematical education of
cadets, doubts if one in ten can visualise an object in three dimensions. I
should have thought the faculty would be common among geometricians,
but many of the highest seem able somehow to get on without much of it.
There is a curious dictum of Napoleon I. quoted in Hume’s Précis of
Modern Tactics, p. 15, of which I can neither find the original authority
nor do I fully understand the meaning. He is reported to have said that
“there are some who, from some physical or moral peculiarity of
character, form a picture (tableau)
of everything. No matter what
knowledge, intellect, courage, or good qualities they may have, these men
are unfit to command.” It is possible that “tableau” should be construed
rather in the sense of a pictorial composition, which, like an epigrammatic
sentence, may be very complete and effective, but not altogether true.
There can, however, be no doubt as to the utility of the visualising
faculty when it is duly subordinated to the higher intellectual operations.
A visual image is the most perfect form of mental representation wherever
the shape, position, and relations of objects in space are concerned. It is of
importance in every handicraft and profession where design is required.
The best workmen are those who visualise the whole of what they propose
to do, before they take a tool in their hands. The village smith and the
carpenter who are employed on odd jobs employ it no less for their work
than
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