Dismantling the Memory Machine [Book Review]

Review of Metaphysics 35 (4):859-860 (1982)
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Abstract

This book develops Bursen's Cornell University thesis. The book is dedicated to Normal Malcolm though it contains no references to Malcolm's recent book on memory. Aside from mention of a recent Time Magazine article, there is no reference to any paper or book published after 1971. These lacunae are perhaps unfortunate. Why? Bursen energetically marshalls something like a part of Malcolm's arguments against scientific--or anyhow essentializing, mechanistic, causal, or computative--theories of memory and in artificial intelligence. Bursen purports to show that mechanistic, computer simulation, or scientific theories of memory are impossible. But the actual production of reasonable approximations of human memory seem not too far away: and Bursen's arguments seem to make it as impossible for there to be a scientifically-explicable theory of a simulation of human memory capacity as for there to be such a theory of actual human memory capacity--if there's no explaining human memory than there is no explaining computer memory either.

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