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Theories of Memory

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  1. Mengistu Amberber (2007). The Language of Memory in a Cross-Linguistic Perspective. John Benjamins.
    ... volume explores the language of memory in a cross-linguistic perspective. The term memory is to be understood broadly as the "capacity to encode, store, ...
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  2. Jose M. Arcaya (1991). Making Time for Memory: A Transcendental Approach. Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 11 (2):75-90.
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  3. Aristotle, On Memory and Reminiscence.
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  4. Jay David Atlas, Qualia, Consciousness, and Memory: Dennett (2005), Rosenthal (2002), Ledoux (2002), and Libet (2004).
    In his recent (2005) book "Sweet Dreams: philosophical obstacles to a science of consciousness," Dennett renews his attack on a philosophical notion of qualia, the success of which attack is required if his brand of Functionalism is to survive. He also articulates once again what he takes to be essential to his notion of consciousness. I shall argue that his new, central argument against the philosophical concept of qualia fails. In passing I point out a difficulty that David (...)
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  5. Annette C. Baier (1976). Mixing Memory and Desire. American Philosophical Quarterly 13 (July):213-20.
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  6. Jeffrey Andrew Barash (1997). The Sources of Memory. Journal of the History of Ideas 58 (4):707-717.
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  7. Renate Bartsch (2002). Consciousness Emerging: The Dynamics of Perception, Imagination, Action, Memory, Thought, and Language. John Benjamins.
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  8. R. W. Beardsmore (1989). Autobiography and the Brain: Mary Warnock on Memory. British Journal of Aesthetics 29 (3):261-269.
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  9. Aaron Ben-Zeev (1986). Two Approaches to Memory. Philosophical Investigations 9 (October):288-301.
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  10. B. S. Benjamin (1956). Remembering. Mind 65 (July):312-331.
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  11. Henri Bergson (1991/2004). Matter and Memory. MIT Press.
    A monumental work by an important modern philosopher, Matter and Memory (1896) represents one of the great inquiries into perception and memory, movement and time, matter and mind. Nobel Prize-winner Henri Bergson surveys these independent but related spheres, exploring the connection of mind and body to individual freedom of choice. Bergson’s efforts to reconcile the facts of biology to a theory of consciousness offered a challenge to the mechanistic view of nature, and his original and innovative views exercised a profound (...)
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  12. Sven Bernecker (2010). Précis of Memory: A Philosophical Study. [REVIEW] Philosophical Studies 153 (1):61-64.
    Précis of memory: a philosophical study Content Type Journal Article DOI 10.1007/s11098-010-9639-4 Authors Sven Bernecker, Department of Philosophy, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697-4555, USA Journal Philosophical Studies Online ISSN 1573-0883 Print ISSN 0031-8116.
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  13. Sven Bernecker (2008). The Metaphysics of Memory. Springer.
    This book investigates central issues in the philosophy of memory.
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  14. Sven Bernecker (2004). Memory and Externalism. Philosophical and Phenomenological Research 69 (3):605-632.
    Content externalism about memory says that the individuation of memory contents depends on relations the subject bears to his past environment. I defend externalism about memory by arguing that neither philosophical nor psychological considerations stand in the way of accepting the context dependency of memory that follows from externalism.
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  15. David Bloch (2007). Aristotle on Memory and Recollection: Text, Translation, Interpretation, and Reception in Western Scholasticism. Brill.
    Based on a new critical edition of Aristotle's "De Memoria" and two interpretive essays, this book challenges current views on Aristotle's theories of memory ...
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  16. Aaron Bogart (2009). The Metaphysics of Memory, by Sven Bernecker. [REVIEW] International Journal of Philosophical Studies 17 (4):622 – 627.
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  17. Evander Bradley McGilvary (1933). Perceptual and Memory Perspectives. Journal of Philosophy 30 (12):309-330.
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  18. Francis H. Bradley (1899). Some Remarks on Memory and Inference. Mind 8 (30):145-166.
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  19. Paul T. Brockelman (1975). Of Memory and Things Past. International Philosophical Quarterly 15 (September):309-325.
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  20. Cyril Brom, Jiří Lukavský & Rudolf Kadlec (2010). Episodic Memory for Human-Like Agents and Human-Like Agents for Episodic Memory. International Journal of Machine Consciousness 2 (02):227-.
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  21. D. H. M. Brooks (1981). Memories and the World. Analysis 41 (June):141-145.
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  22. Anthony L. Brueckner (1997). Externalism and Memory. Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 78 (1):1-12.
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  23. Christopher Buford (2009). Memory, Quasi-Memory, and Pseudo-Quasi-Memory. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 87 (3):465 – 478.
    Bishop Butler objected to Locke's theory of personal identity on the grounds that memory presupposes personal identity. Most of those sympathetic with Locke's account have accepted Butler's criticism, and have sought to devise a theory of personal identity in the spirit of Locke's that avoids Butler's circularity objection. John McDowell has argued that even the more recent accounts of personal identity are vulnerable to the kind of objection Butler raised against Locke's own account. I criticize McDowell's stance, drawing on a (...)
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  24. Tyler Burge (2004). Memory and Persons. Philosophical Review 112 (3):289-337.
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  25. Tyler Burge (1997). Interlocution, Perception, and Memory. Philosophical Studies 86 (1):21-47.
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  26. Sue Campbell (2006). Our Faithfulness to the Past: Reconstructing Memory Value. Philosophical Psychology 19 (3):361 – 380.
    The reconstructive turn in memory theory challenges us to provide an account of successful remembering that is attentive to the ways in which we use memory, both individually and socially. I investigate conceptualizations of accuracy and integrity useful to memory theorists and argue that faithful recollection is often a complex epistemological/ethical achievement.
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  27. Anthony J. Cascardi (1984). Remembering. Review of Metaphysics 38 (December):275-302.
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  28. Edward S. Casey (2000). Stompin' on Scott: A Cursory Critique of Mind and Memory. Research in Phenomenology 30 (1):223-239.
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  29. Edward S. Casey (1987). Remembering: A Phenomenological Study. Indiana University Press.
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  30. Edward S. Casey (1983). Keeping the Past in Mind. Review of Metaphysics 37 (September):77-96.
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  31. Edward S. Casey (1979). Perceiving and Remembering. Review of Metaphysics 32 (March):407-436.
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  32. Edward S. Casey (1977). Imagining and Remembering. Review of Metaphysics 31 (December):187-209.
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  33. Christopher Cherry (1996). What Matters About Memory. Philosophy 71 (278):541 - 552.
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  34. William Child (2006). Memory, Expression, and Past-Tense Self-Knowledge. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 73 (1):54–76.
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  35. John B. Cobb Jr (2008). Memory in a Whiteheadian Perspective. World Futures 64 (2):116 – 124.
    Whitehead does not provide us with a systematic account of the various types of experience to which the word “memory” is applied. Nevertheless, he does provide us with a way of understanding the world, and living creatures who inhabit it, that places the discussion in a different context from the usual one: the diverse features of human experience that we call memory are developed forms of basic patterns of relationship that characterize all actual entities. I will first review the relevant (...)
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  36. Arthur W. Collins (1997). Personal Identity and the Coherence of Q-Memory. Philosophical Quarterly 47 (186):73-80.
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  37. Rebecca Copenhaver, Reid on Memory and Personal Identity. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  38. James W. Cornman (1966). More on Mistaken Memory. Analysis 26 (December):57-58.
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  39. James W. Cornman (1965). Malcolm's Mistaken Memory. Analysis 25 (April):161-167.
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  40. D. R. Cousin (1953). A Study in Memory. By E. J. Furlong. (Thomas Nelson and Sons. 1951. Pp. Vi + 106. Price 12s. 6d.). Philosophy 28 (107):363-.
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  41. Carl F. Craver (2002). Interlevel Experiments and Multilevel Mechanisms in the Neuroscience of Memory. Philosophy of Science Supplemental Volume 69 (3):S83-S97.
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  42. Robert G. Crowder & Heidi E. Wenk (1997). Glenberg's Embodied Memory: Less Than Meets the Eye. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (1):21-22.
    We are sympathetic to most of what Glenberg says in his target article, but we consider it common wisdom rather than something radically new. Others have argued persuasively against the idea of abstraction in cognition, for example. On the other hand, Hebbian connectionism cannot get along without the idea of association, at least at the neural level.
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  43. Steven Davis (1983). Causal Theories Of Mind: Action, Knowledge, Memory, Perception, And Reference. Ny: De Gruyter.
    INTRODUCTION SECTION I In the last 20 years or so philosophers in the analytic tradition have taken an increasing interest in causal theories of a wide ...
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  44. Mario De Caro (1999). Interpretations and Causes: New Perspectives on Donald Davidson's Philosophy. Kluwer.
    In Interpretations and Causes, some of the leading contemporary analytic philosophers discuss Davidson's new ideas in a lively, relevant, useful, and not always ...
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  45. Dorothea Debus (2010). Accounting for Epistemic Relevance: A New Problem for the Causal Theory of Memory. American Philosophical Quarterly 47 (1):17-29.
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  46. Dorothea Debus (2008). Experiencing the Past: A Relational Account of Recollective Memory. Dialectica 62 (4):405-432.
    Sometimes we remember past objects or events in a vivid, experiential way. The present paper addresses some fundamental questions about the metaphysics of such experiential or 'recollective' memories. More specifically, it develops the 'Relational Account' of recollective memory, which consists of the following three claims. (1) A subject who recollectively remembers (or 'R-remembers') a past object or event stands in an experiential relation (namely, a 'recollective relation') to the relevant past object or event. (2) The R-remembered object or event itself (...)
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  47. Dorothea Debus (2007). Perspectives on the Past: A Study of the Spatial Perspectival Characteristics of Recollective Memories. Mind and Language 22 (2):173-206.
    The following paper considers one important feature of our experiential or ‘recollective’ memories, namely their spatial perspectival characteristics. I begin by considering the ‘Past-Dependency-Claim’, which states that every recollective memory (or ‘R-memory’) has its spatial perspectival characteristics in virtue of the subject’s present awareness of the spatial perspectival characteristics of a relevant past perceptual experience. Although the Past-Dependency-Claim might for various reasons seem particularly attractive, I show that it is false. I then proceed to develop and defend the ‘Present-Dependency-Claim’, namely (...)
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  48. Daniel C. Dennett & Chris Westbury (2000). Mining The Past To Construct The Future: Memory and Belief as Forms of Knowledge. In Daniel L. Schacter & Elaine Scarry (eds.), Memory, Brain, and Belief.
    "The analogy between memory and a repository, and between remembering and retaining, is obvious and is to be found in all languages; it being natural to express the operations of the mind by images taken from things material. But in philosophy we ought to draw aside the veil of imagery, and to view them naked.".
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  49. Jérôme Dokic (2001). Is Memory Purely Preservative? In Christoph Hoerl & Teresa McCormack (eds.), Time and Memory. Oxford University Press.
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  50. Jérôme Dokic (1997). Une Théorie Réflexive du Souvenir Épisodique. Dialogue 36 (03):527-554.
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  51. W. Earle (1956). Memory. Review of Metaphysics 10 (September):3-27.
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  52. Shimon Edelman, Trade-off Between Capacity and Generalization in a Model of Memory.
    Although computational considerations suggest that a resource-limited memory system may have to trade off capacity for generalization ability, such a trade-off has not been demonstrated in the past. We describe a simple model of memory that exhibits this trade-off and describe its performance in a variety of tasks.
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  53. Walter M. Elsasser (1953). A Reformulation of Bergson's Theory of Memory. Philosophy of Science 20 (1):7-21.
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  54. J. D. G. Evans (1973). Aristotle's De Partibus Animalium I and De Generatione Animalium I; Aristotle on Memory. [REVIEW] Philosophy 48 (186):404-406.
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  55. David Farrell Krell (1981). Memory as Malady and Therapy in Freud and Hegel. Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 12 (1):33-50.
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  56. Edward Douglas Fawcett (1912). Matter and Memory. Mind 21 (82):201-232.
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  57. Jordi Fernandez (forthcoming). Objects of Memory. In Hal Pashler (ed.), Encyclopedia of the Mind. Sage Publications.
  58. Jordi Fernandez (2008). Memory, Past and Self. Synthese 160 (1):103-121.
    The purpose of this essay is to determine how we should construe the content of memories. First, I distinguish two features of memory that a construal of mnemic content should respect. These are the ‘attribution of pastness’ feature (a subject is inclined to believe of those events that she remembers that they happened in the past) and the ‘attribution of existence’ feature (a subject is inclined to believe that she existed at the time that those events that she remembers took (...)
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  59. Jordi Fernandez (2008). Memory and Time. Philosophical Studies 141 (3):333 - 356.
    The purpose of this essay is to clarify the notion of mnemonic content. Memories have content. However, it is not clear whether memories are about past events in the world, past states of our own minds, or some combination of those two elements. I suggest that any proposal about mnemonic content should help us understand why events are presented to us in memory as being in the past. I discuss three proposals about mnemonic content and, eventually, I put forward a (...)
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  60. Jordi Fernandez (2006). The Intentionality of Memory. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 84 (1):39-57.
    The purpose of this essay is to determine how we should construe the content of memories or, in other words, to determine what the intentional objects of memory are.1 The issue that will concern us is, then, analogous to the traditional philosophical question of whether perception directly puts us in cognitive contact with entities in the world or with entities in our own minds. As we shall see, there are some interesting aspects of the phenomenology and the epistemology of memory, (...)
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  61. Jordi Fernandez (2006). Memory and Perception: Remembering Snowflake. Theoria 21 (56):147-164.
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  62. E. J. Furlong (1970). Mr. Urmson on Memory and Imagination. Mind 79 (313):137-138.
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  63. E. J. Furlong (1968). The Concept of Memory. By Stanley Munsat. [REVIEW] Philosophy 43 (164):169-.
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  64. E. J. Furlong (1967). Memory. By Brian Smith. [REVIEW] Philosophy 42 (162):383-.
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  65. E. J. Furlong (1956). The Empiricist Theory of Memory. Mind 65 (October):542-47.
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  66. E. J. Furlong (1954). Memory and the Argument From Illusion. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 54:131-144.
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  67. Jonardon Ganeri (1999). Self-Intimation, Memory and Personal Identity. Journal of Indian Philosophy 27 (5):469-483.
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  68. Rocco J. Gennaro, Douglas J. Herrmann & Michael Sarapata (2006). Aspects of the Unity of Consciousness and Everyday Memory Failures. Consciousness and Cognition 15 (2):372-385.
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  69. Daniel Giberman (2009). Who They Are and What de Se: Burge on Quasi-Memory. Philosophical Studies 144 (2):297 - 311.
    Tyler Burge has recently argued that quasi-memory-based psychological reductionist accounts of diachronic personal identity are deeply problematic. According to Burge, these accounts either fail to include appropriately de se elements or presuppose facts about diachronic personal identity—facts of the very kind that the accounts are supposed to explain. Neither of these objections is compelling. The first is based in confusion about the version of reductionism to which it putatively applies. The second loses its force when we recognize that reductionism is (...)
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  70. Arthur M. Glenberg (1997). What Memory is For. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (1):1-19.
    I address the commentators' calls for clarification of theoretical terms, discussion of similarities to other proposals, and extension of the ideas. In doing so, I keep the focus on the purpose of memory: enabling the organism to make sense of its environment so that it can take action appropriate to constraints resulting from the physical, personal, social, and cultural situations.
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  71. Sanford Goldberg (2010). The Metasemantics of Memory. Philosophical Studies 153 (1):95-107.
    In Sven Bernecker’s excellent new book, Memory, he proposes an account of what we might call the metasemantics of memory: the conditions that determine the contents of the mental representations employed in memory. Bernecker endorses a pastist externalist view, according to which the content of a memory-constituting representation is fixed, in part, by the external conditions prevalent at the (past) time of the tokening of the original representation (the one from which the memory-constituting one is causally derived). Bernecker argues that (...)
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  72. Sanford C. Goldberg (2005). The Dialectical Context of Boghossian's Memory Argument. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 35 (1):135-48.
    Externalism1 is the thesis that some propositional attitudes depend for their individuation on features of the thinker’s (social and/or physical) environment. The doctrine of self-knowledge of thoughts is the thesis that for all thinkers S and occurrent thoughts that p, S has authoritative and non-empirical knowledge of her thought that p. A much-discussed question in the literature is whether these two doctrines are compatible. In this paper I attempt to respond to one argument for an incompatibilist conclusion, Boghossian’s 1989 ‘Memory (...)
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  73. Terence Greenwood (1967). Personal Identity and Memory. Philosophical Quarterly 17 (October):334-344.
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  74. Johan E. Gustafsson (2010). Did Locke Defend the Memory Continuity Criterion of Personal Identity? Locke Studies 10:113–129.
    John Locke’s account of personal identity is usually thought to have been proved false by Thomas Reid’s simple ‘Gallant Officer’ argument. Locke is traditionally interpreted as holding that your having memories of a past person’s thoughts or actions is necessary and sufficient for your being identical to that person. This paper argues that the traditional memory interpretation of Locke’s account is mistaken and defends a memory continuity view according to which a sequence of overlapping memories is necessary and sufficient for (...)
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  75. Ian Hacking (1995). Rewriting the Soul: Multiple Personality and the Sciences of Memory. Princeton University Press.
    Here the distinguished philosopher Ian Hacking uses the MPD epidemic and its links with the contemporary concept of child abuse to scrutinize today's moral...
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  76. Philip P. Hallie (1957). Empiricism, Memory and Verification. Mind 66 (261):93-95.
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  77. Andy Hamilton (2009). Memory and Self-Consciousness: Immunity to Error Through Misidentification. Synthese 171 (3).
    In The Blue Book, Wittgenstein defined a category of uses of “I” which he termed “I”-as-subject, contrasting them with “I”-as-object uses. The hallmark of this category is immunity to error through misidentification (IEM). This article extends Wittgenstein’s characterisation to the case of memory-judgments, discusses the significance of IEM for self-consciousness—developing the idea that having a first-person thought involves thinking about oneself in a distinctive way in which one cannot think of anyone or anything else—and refutes a common objection to the (...)
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  78. Andy Hamilton (2003). 'Scottish Commonsense' About Memory: A Defence of Thomas Reid's Direct Knowledge Account. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 81 (2):229-245.
    Reid rejects the image theory --the representative or indirect realist position--that memory-judgements are inferred from or otherwise justified by a present image or introspectible state. He also rejects the trace theory , which regards memories as essentially traces in the brain. In contrast he argues for a direct knowledge account in which personal memory yields unmediated knowledge of the past. He asserts the reliability of memory, not in currently fashionable terms as a reliable belief-forming process, but more elusively as a (...)
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  79. Andy Hamilton (1998). False Memory Syndrome and the Authority of Personal Memory-Claims: A Philosophical Perspective. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 5 (4):283-297.
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  80. Christoph Hoerl (2008). On Being Stuck in Time. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 7 (4):485-500.
    It is sometimes claimed that non-human animals (and perhaps also young children) live their lives entirely in the present and are cognitively ‘stuck in time’. Adult humans, by contrast, are said to be able to engage in ‘mental time travel’. One possible way of making sense of this distinction is in terms of the idea that animals and young children cannot engage in tensed thought, which might seem a preposterous idea in the light of certain findings in comparative and developmental (...)
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  81. David Mark Kovacs (2009). Memory and Imagery in Russell's The Analysis of Mind. Prolegomena 8 (2):193-206.
    According to the theory Russell defends in The Analysis of Mind, ‘true memories’ (roughly, memories that are not remembering-hows) are recollections of past events accompanied by a feeling of familiarity. While memory images play a vital role in this account, Russell does not pay much attention to the fact that imagery plays different roles in different sorts of memory. In most cases that Russell considers, memory is based on an image that serves as a datum (imagebased memories), but there are (...)
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  82. Kourken Michaelian (2010). The Metaphysics of Memory. [REVIEW] European Journal of Philosophy 18 (4):623-626.
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  83. Marya Schechtman (2010). Memory and Identity. Philosophical Studies 153 (1):65-79.
    Among the many topics covered in Sven Bernecker’s impressive study of memory is the relation between memory and personal identity. Bernecker uses his grammatical taxonomy of memory and causal account to defend the claim that memory does not logically presuppose personal identity and hence that circularity objections to memory-based accounts of personal identity are misplaced. In my comment I investigate these claims, suggesting that the relation between personal identity and memory is more complicated than Bernecker’s analysis suggests. In particular, I (...)
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  84. John Sutton (2009). The Feel of the World: Exograms, Habits, and the Confusion of Types of Memory. In Andrew Kania (ed.), Philosophers on *Memento*. Routledge.
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  85. John Sutton, Celia B. Harris, Paul G. Keil & Amanda J. Barnier (2010). The Psychology of Memory, Extended Cognition, and Socially Distributed Remembering. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 9 (4):521-560.
    This paper introduces a new, expanded range of relevant cognitive psychological research on collaborative recall and social memory to the philosophical debate on extended and distributed cognition. We start by examining the case for extended cognition based on the complementarity of inner and outer resources, by which neural, bodily, social, and environmental resources with disparate but complementary properties are integrated into hybrid cognitive systems, transforming or augmenting the nature of remembering or decision-making. Adams and Aizawa, noting this distinctive complementarity argument, (...)
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