Why would a student include an allusion to Albert Einstein, an accomplished scientist with a famously bad

memory, in a paper about how people learn? (1 point)
to show that memorization is important to everyone
to show how famous people are remembered
to show that memorization is important when learning something new
to show how remembering something is not as important as understanding it

1 answer

The most appropriate reason for including an allusion to Albert Einstein, considering his famously bad memory, in a paper about how people learn would be:

to show how remembering something is not as important as understanding it.

This allusion could illustrate that even someone as brilliant as Einstein valued understanding concepts over rote memorization.