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Jordi Fernandez here offers a philosophical investigation of memory, one which engages with memory's philosophically puzzling characteristics in order to clarify what memory is. Memories interact with mental states of other types in a particular way, and they also have associated feelings that these other mental states lack. They are special in terms of their representational capacity too, since one can have memories of objective events as well as memories of
one's own past experiences. Finally, memories are epistemically unique, in that beliefs formed on the basis of memories are protected from certain errors of misidentification, and are justified in a way which does not rely on any cognitive capacity other than memory.
To explain these unique features, Fernandez proposes that memories have a particular functional role which involves past perceptual experiences and beliefs about the past. He suggests that memories have a particular content as well, namely that they represent themselves as having a certain causal origin. Fernandez then explains the feelings associated with our memories as the experience of some of the things that our memories represent, things such as our own past experiences, or the
fact that memories originate in those experiences. He also accounts for the special justification for belief afforded by our memories in terms of the content that memories have. The resulting picture is a unified account of several philosophically interesting aspects of memory, one that will appeal to
philosophers of mind, metaphysicians, and epistemologists alike.
Product details
- Hardback | 238 pages
- 161 x 237 x 21mm | 486g
- 09 Oct 2019
- Oxford University Press Inc
- New York, United States
- English
- 0190073004
- 9780190073008
Download Memory : A Self-Referential Account (9780190073008).pdf, available at ebookdownloadfree.co for free.
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