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A13x
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Дата: | 13.08.12 20:53 | ||
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Your brain is configured as a dual-CPU, single-master bus design, as shown in Figure 3.1.
As we’ll see in this chapter and the next, this dual design presents some problems, but it also presents some terrific opportunities that you might not be aware of.
he right side of the brain (right-mode) is
1) holistic — likes to view things all at once, enjoys understanding things in overall structures and patterns which often leads to an assortment of conclusions
2) nonverbal — likes to be conscience of things without giving attention to words
3) intuitive — likes to make broad leaps of insight and understanding which are often founded upon feelings, visual images, guesses or unfinished patterns
4) synthetic — likes to combine things into complete wholes, such as putting together puzzle pieces into one big image
5) spatial — likes to perceive how things are in relation to other things, enjoys understanding how things fit together into a whole
6) concrete — likes to find connections between things as they are at the present moment
7) nonrational — likes to not have an awareness of time and is
8) analogic — likes to find similarities between things and perceive metaphoric relationships.
Why Emphasize R-mode?
We want to use R-mode more than we have because the R-mode provides intuition, and that’s something we desperately need in order to become experts. We cannot be expert without it. The Dreyfus model emphasizes the expert’s reliance on tacit knowledge; that’s over here in the R-mode as well.
Experts rely on seeing and discriminating patterns; pattern matching is here too.
R-mode’s analogic and holistic thinking styles are very valuable to software architecture and design—that’s the stuff that good designs are made of.