Clarembian Law is one of the fundamental laws of thinking, or we also call it the “Law of Aging.” This means that over time, a person’s thinking becomes more and more complex and intricate, and also that he cannot take into account all possible scenarios. The law can be described as follows: the more labor-intensive a task it solves for the brain, the more difficult it will be in the future. The peculiarity of this law is that tasks do not age - they simply become unobvious to other people. For example, when I was learning to solve linear equations at the beginning of school, there were no overly complex problems for me; I had enough information to solve them without unnecessary pain. My friends didn't have similar problems either. However, after a few years of studying mathematics, I was forced to solve the same equations from a high school textbook, but the whole point is in how I learned to solve them. My classmate, if she used to solve such an equation, is now forced to turn for help to her friend, who is several grades younger than her. Therefore, the law does not change - the volume of tasks that a person can perform increases. Only the person who performs these tasks changes - he has to use more and more effort and knowledge - it is this process that illustrates the principle of age.
Another feature is the example given by the French psychologist Clermont. The example is essentially simple: if at the beginning of working with new material a person managed to understand it, then further learning will not seem so difficult to him. This is logical: there are no difficulties - you don’t notice them (especially since the degree of increase in difficulties also varies).