Results for 'Inventing Memory'

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  1. John young.Inventing Memory - 2008 - In Mine Doğantan (ed.), Recorded music: philosophical and critical reflections. London: Middlesex University Press. pp. 314.
  2.  90
    Invention, Memory, and Place.Edward W. Said - 2000 - Critical Inquiry 26 (2):175-192.
  3. Inventing memory : documentary and imagination in acousmatic music.John Young - 2008 - In Mine Doğantan (ed.), Recorded music: philosophical and critical reflections. London: Middlesex University Press.
  4.  3
    Suppressed, Adopted and Invented Memories.Kari Syreeni - 2024 - Approaching Religion 14 (1):86-98.
    The Gospel of John reflects several layers of social memory and theological creativity concerning Jesus’s death. In the early material, there seems to be a suppressed awareness of Jesus’s fate and an unwillingness to unfold it in narrative form – something that recalls the hypothetical sayings gospel Q and the Gospel of Thomas. There is also a search for alternative, figurative ways to visualize the endpoint of Jesus’s earthly life. Eventually, the narrative memory of Jesus’s passion, as told (...)
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  5.  8
    The invention of memory: A new view of the brain.William J. Clancey - 1991 - Artificial Intelligence 50 (2):241-284.
  6.  21
    (Re-)Inventing, (Re-) Cycling, (Re-)Inforcing Memories in (Auto)Biography.Myrdene Anderson & Devika Chawla - 2009 - Semiotics:590-597.
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  7.  9
    Arts of Invention and Arts of Memory: Creation and Criticism.Richard McKeon - 1975 - Critical Inquiry 1 (4):723-739.
    The arts of poetry and the arts of criticism are uncovered and studied in their products, in poems and in judgments. Poetry and criticism, however, the making and judging of poems, are processes. The study of literature as a product - existing poems and existing interpretations and appreciations of poetry - develops a body of knowledge which is sometimes called "poetic sciences." The recognition and use of poetic and critical processes - producing and judging poems which did not previously exist, (...)
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  8.  2
    Human Memory as a Self‐organized Natural System.Bernard Ancori - 2019 - In The Carousel of Time. Hoboken, NJ, USA: Wiley. pp. 41–62.
    The emphasis placed by H. Atlan, like G. Bateson, on the reception of messages during communication between subsystems leads to a conception of learning, and more generally of human memory, surprisingly close to that proposed by I. Rosenfield on the basis of the work of G. M. Edelman. The authors stressed the close and reciprocal link between the theory of functional localization and the conception of memory, which they have just seen, radically refuted by Rosenfield. The theory of (...)
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  9.  13
    The Harmony of Illusions: Inventing Post-traumatic Stress Disorder.Allan Young - 1995 - Princeton: Princeton University Press.
    As far back as we know, there have been individuals incapacitated by memories that have filled them with sadness and remorse, fright and horror, or a sense of irreparable loss. Only recently, however, have people tormented with such recollections been diagnosed as suffering from "post-traumatic stress disorder." Here Allan Young traces this malady, particularly as it is suffered by Vietnam veterans, to its beginnings in the emergence of ideas about the unconscious mind and to earlier manifestations of traumatic memory (...)
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  10.  48
    L'invention du moi.Vitor Sommavilla de Souza Barros - 2012 - Kriterion: Journal of Philosophy 53 (126):613-618.
    Montaigne, no "De l'art de conferer", discute critérios que permitem distinguir os homens segundo suas capacidades (suffisances). A "maneira" de discursar ocupa o centro desta questão e entre suas qualidades se destaca a "ordem", que nos é apresentada, sobretudo, a partir dos desvios da "tolice" (sottise) e "obstinação" (opiniastreté), símbolos do dogmatismo e de uma errônea lide com os saberes que se apoiam na memória. Procura-se mostrar que a ordem se funda na assimilação e penetração do julgamento nas matérias que (...)
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  11. Ritual, memory, and emotion: Comparing two cognitive hypotheses.A. Howard - unknown
    Without systems of public, external symbols for recording information, nonliterate communities have to rely on human memory for the retention and transmission of cultural knowledge. Religious expressions either evolved in directions that rendered them memorable or they were--quite literally--forgotten. Most religious systems, including all of the great world religions, emerged among populations that were mostly illiterate (even if there was a literate elite). Thus, it should come as no surprise that religious systems and ritual systems, in particular, have evolved (...)
     
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  12.  8
    Artistic memory and Roma women’s history through an intersectional lens: The Giuvlipen Theater.Maria Alina Asavei - 2022 - European Journal of Women's Studies 29 (1):8-22.
    This article addresses cultural memory’s ability to address past and present injustices by focusing on the artistic-political practices displayed by the professional actresses of Roma descent from the independent theater the Giuvlipen in Bucharest. The founders of this Romani women-centered theater also have ‘invented’ the word ‘Giuvlipen’ – ‘feminism’ in the Romani language – because there had previously been no word to connote both the forms of oppression and the consciousness raising politics performed by Romani women. By applying the (...)
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  13. About Time: Inventing the Fourth Dimension.William J. Friedman - 1990 - Cambridge: MIT Press.
    In About Time, William Friedman provides a new integrated look at research on the psychological processes that underlie the human experience of time.
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  14.  22
    Technical cognition, working memory and creativity.Thomas Wynn & Frederick L. Coolidge - 2014 - Pragmatics and Cognition 22 (1):45-63.
    This essay explores the nature and neurological basis of creativity in technical production. After presenting a model of expert technical cognition based in cognitive anthropology and cognitive psychology, the authors propose that craft production has three inherent sources of novelty — procedural drift, serendipitous error and fiddling. However, these are quite limited in their creative potential, which may help explain the virtual absence of innovation over the long millennia of the Palaeolithic. Innovation can be far more rapid and effective via (...)
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  15.  19
    Multiple Independent Inventions of a Non-Functional Technology: Combinatorial Descriptive Names in Botany, 1640-1830.Sara Scharf - 2008 - Spontaneous Generations 2 (1):145.
    Historians and sociologists of science usually discuss multiple independent inventions or multiple independent discoveries in terms of priority disputes among the inventors. But what should we make of the multiple invention of a technology that not only gave rise to very few priority disputes, but never worked and was rejected by each inventor’s contemporaries as soon as it was made public? This paper examines seven such situations in the history of botany. I devote particular attention to the inventors’ cultural and (...)
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  16.  14
    The memorable invention of the death of Jesus.Arthur J. Dewey - 2016 - HTS Theological Studies 72 (4):1-8.
    The death story of Jesus of Nazareth has traditionally been understood as a matter of historical fact. The various versions of the story would seem to confirm a documented death scene. Nevertheless, critical appraisals of this material have raised numerous questions regarding the passion story. This article considers how the very structure of the story is a vital clue to the way in which the death of Jesus was invented. The Jewish tale of the suffering and vindication of the innocent (...)
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  17.  11
    Replicating Mathematical Inventions: Galileo’s Compass, Its Instructions, Its Students.Mario Biagioli - 2022 - Perspectives on Science 30 (3):437-462.
    Questions about how closure is achieved in disputes involving new observational or experimental claims have highlighted the role of bodily knowledge possibly irreducible to written experimental protocols and instructions how to build and operate instruments. This essay asks similar questions about a scenario that is both related and significantly different: the replication of an invention, not of an observation or the instrument through which it produced. Furthermore, the machine considered here—Galileo’s compass or sector—was not a typical industrial invention (like a (...)
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  18.  31
    Expertise, Criticism and Holocaust Memory in Cinema.A. Susan Owen - 2011 - Social Epistemology 25 (3):233-247.
    This essay offers a critical examination of two recent Holocaust films that exemplify contrasting approaches to Holocaust representation: Peter Forgacs’s 1997 The maelstrom: A family chronicle and Quentin tarantino’s 2009 Inglourious basterds. One film is historical; the other translates history to figurative exaggeration. The essay explores how The maelstrom positions viewers within the constructed subjunctive spaces of the film, while Inglourious basterds positions viewers as spectators of history as comic book. Looking at these films together illuminates competing rhetorical claims to (...)
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  19.  12
    Mental Images, Memory Storage, and Composition in the High Middle Ages.Mary J. Curruthers - 2008 - Das Mittelalter 13 (1):63-79.
    This essay explores the implications of a commonly held ancient and medieval belief that human memory and invention are, if not exactly the same, the closest thing to it. In order to create, in order to think at all, human beings require both a well-provisioned stock of memory-held knowledge and some mental tool or machine, an engine which lives in the intricate networks of their own memories. In the verbal arts of the trivium students learned the basic principles (...)
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  20.  52
    Representations of Time and Memory in Holocaust Literature.Arun Kumar Pokhrel - 2009 - Journal of Philosophy: A Cross-Disciplinary Inquiry 4 (8):27-37.
    This essay analyzes the representations of time and memory in Holocaust literature through a comparative study of Charlotte Delbo’s memoir Days and Memory and Ida Fink’s three stories “A Scrap of Time,” “A Second Scrap of Time,” and “Traces.” Although both the writers make use of time and memory to represent the Holocaust, their ways of representation vary significantly. Memory and time are used in Delbo to show the timelessness in complex layers of memory and (...)
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  21.  69
    Bernard Stiegler’s Philosophy of Technology: Invention, decision, and education in times of digitization.Anna Kouppanou - 2015 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 47 (10):1110-1123.
    Bernard Stiegler’s concept of individuation suggests that the human being is co-constituted with technology. Technology precedes the individual in the respect that the latter is thrown in a technological world that always already contains externally inscribed memories—what he calls tertiary memories—that selectively form the individual and the collective space of the community. Revisiting Husserlian phenomenology, Stiegler renews the critique of culture industries asserting that imagination and differance have always been technologically mediated, and echoing the Heideggerian anxiety concerning thinking’s over-determination, Stiegler (...)
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  22.  42
    Afro-Brazilian Identity and Memory.Reginaldo Prandi - 2004 - Diogenes 51 (1):35-43.
    The problem of the construction of memory that faces the Afro-Brazilian population presents itself as more than a simple need for an identity connected to an original past, but in addition as essential, because for historical reasons their social reality has not yet reached the end of its struggle. The African composition of Brazilian culture is based on several sources of many origins peculiar to different African peoples. The memory people have of Africa is vague, generic, indefinite. Though (...)
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  23. Hybrid Identities and Memory.Giuseppe Cacciatore - 2011 - Iris. European Journal of Philosophy and Public Debate 3 (5):113-124.
    In this article the author reflects on some of the most recent instances of the hybridization of identities, brought about by movements of migration in the more general context of globalization. New situations triggered by the epoch-making historical developments of the world we live in require us to modify our notion of individual identity, which is no longer seen as a fundamental and self-referential essence of the individual, but rather as the product of a number of relational variables, many of (...)
     
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  24.  28
    “Déjà Vu” or Memory-Science between Gérard de Nerval and Marcel Proust.Evelyne Ender - 2005 - Science in Context 18 (4):583-606.
    ArgumentCultivated by a number of writers and studied by psychologists, the phenomenon of déjà vu is an invention of the nineteenth century and is part of a broader exploration of how the mind experiences memory and time. Thus this typically benign mental aberration provides an entry-point into the mechanisms that preside over the regulation of the flow of consciousness. The theories of the mind developed recently by neuroscientists help us understand, meanwhile, why investigations into this mental “event” necessarily invoke (...)
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  25.  9
    The Meaning and Value of Invention.François Guéry - 1996 - Science in Context 9 (1):17-38.
    The ArgumentThe secret of invention or the art of inventing has recently become the object of positive or experimental research, aimed at discovering the logic of the initial mental processes that lead to “innovation.” But the problem is old and goes back to antiquity: The art of memory, rhetoric, symbolics. Does the succession of thought in invention follow a rule, such that its variations could be classified? Here I offer but a general direction: There is an analogy between (...)
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  26.  16
    Up from Memory.Bradford J. Vivian - 2012 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 45 (2):189-212.
    Booker T. Washington's Cotton States Exposition Address enlarges our understanding of the genre of witnessing by presenting a version of public testimony and historical remembrance sharply at odds with contemporary definitions of the genre. Washington's resolute choice to lend voice as a living witness to the atrocities of slavery in the service of conspicuously pragmatic and narrowly defined interests rather than universal human rights dramatically separates his performance of public witnessing from its late modern forms. Whereas survivors of historical atrocity (...)
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  27.  65
    Echoes of Beauty: In Memory of Pleshette DeArmitt.Elaine P. Miller - 2015 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 23 (2):67-75.
    There is a special poignancy to the fact that Pleshette DeArmitt's essay "Sarah Kofman's Art of Affirmation" foregrounds Freud's essay "On Transience," in which he muses on the fact that beauty seems to be inextricably linked to a fleeting existence. As DeArmitt writes, "beauty, even in full flowering, foreshadows its own demise, causing what Freud describes as 'a foretaste of mourning.'" Such a transience, in Freud's mind, increases rather than decreases the worth of all that is beautiful. In her essay, (...)
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  28.  48
    Ideas in the brain: The localization of memory traces in the eighteenth century.Timo Kaitaro - 1999 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 37 (2):301-322.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Ideas in the Brain: The Localization of Memory Traces in the Eighteenth CenturyTimo KaitaroPlato suggests in the Theaetetus that we imagine a piece of wax in our soul, a gift from the goddess of Memory. We are able to remember things when our perceptions or thoughts imprint a trace upon this piece of wax, in the same manner as a seal is stamped on wax. Plato uses (...)
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  29.  33
    Temps et récit : un défi pour l'écriture de l'histoire. À propos d'une lecture ricœurienne de Landscape and Memory de Simon Schama.Josef Řídký - 2017 - Études Ricoeuriennes / Ricoeur Studies 8 (1):54-66.
    During the past fifty years, a dispute over the nature of historical discourse has taken place with the narrativist approach, arguing for the dominance of narration in history, on the one hand, and professional historians defending historiography's will to tell the truth, on the other. Paul Ricoeur entered the discussion with his work Time and Narrative where he offered an inventive response. According to him, both narration and scientific explication are essential to historical discourse. To support his statement, he introduces (...)
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  30.  10
    Conjuring Caliban's Woman: Moving beyond Cinema's Memory of Man_ in _Praise House.Ayanna Dozier - 2021 - Hypatia 36 (3):503-518.
    Julie Dash's experimental short film, Praise House, situates conjuring as both a narrative and formal device to invent new memories around Black womanhood that exceed our representation within the epistemes of Man. I view Praise House as an example of conjure-cinema with which we can evaluate how Black feminist filmmakers, primarily working in experimental film, manipulate the poetic structure and aesthetics of film to affect audiences rather than rely on representational narrative alone. Following the scholarship of Sylvia Wynter, I use (...)
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  31.  55
    Digital archives in the cloud: Collective memory, institutional histories and the politics of information.Michael A. Peters & Tina Besley - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 51 (10):1020-1029.
    The archive is a cultural institution that creates a framework for the social and collective memory and as such is one of the collection of knowledge institutions that not only preserves and classifies “texts” but uses them to re-create collective memory and sometimes to invent cultural histories. Like all knowledge institutions, the archive is also a construction deeply implicated in knowledge politics or what Foucault calls power/knowledge. In the past the archive has functioned as a central metaphor for (...)
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  32.  8
    Book Review: Heuretics: The Logic of Invention. [REVIEW]Tom Conley - 1995 - Philosophy and Literature 19 (1):147-148.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Heuretics: The Logic of InventionTom ConleyHeuretics: The Logic of Invention, by Gregory L. Ulmer; xiv & 267 pp. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994, $40.00 cloth, $13.95 paper.Heuretics designates areas of logic devoted to discovery and invention. This book sets out to reconfigure the metaphors that have dominated investigation since the advent of print-culture and the Columbian voyages. Adventure, quest, risk, discovery: Francis Bacon’s analogy of scientific research (...)
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  33.  33
    Language enabled by Baldwinian evolution of memory capacity.Thomas K. Landauer - 2008 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 31 (5):526-527.
    The claim that language is shaped by the brain is weakened by lack of clear specification of what necessary and sufficient properties the brain actually imposes. To account for human intellectual superiority, it is proposed that language did require special brain evolution (Deacon 1997), but that what evolved was a merely quantitative change rather than a radically new invention.
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  34.  6
    Aware and Unaware Memory.Does Unaware Memory Underlie - 2001 - In Christoph Hoerl & Teresa McCormack (eds.), Time and Memory: Issues in Philosophy and Psychology. Oxford University Press. pp. 187.
  35.  23
    Logic and the Art of Memory: The Quest for a Universal Language (review). [REVIEW]Ned O'Gorman - 2003 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 36 (2):168-172.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy and Rhetoric 36.2 (2003) 168-172 [Access article in PDF] Logic and the Art of Memory: The Quest for a Universal Language. Paolo Rossi. Trans. Stephen Clucas. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000. Pp. xxviii + 333. $32.00 cloth. Of the traditional five canons of rhetoric—inventio, dispositio, elocutio, memoria, and actio—the most circuitous and fascinating history belongs to memoria. From its propulsion of Homeric lore to its grounding (...)
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  36.  25
    Memory Changes in Healthy Older Adults.Declarative Memory - 2000 - In Endel Tulving (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Memory. Oxford University Press. pp. 395.
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  37.  69
    Memory for Emotional Events.Eyewitness Memory - 2000 - In Endel Tulving (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Memory. Oxford University Press. pp. 379.
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  38. Verse: Soft is this Stone.Memory Mcgonigal - 1960 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 41 (4):491.
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  39.  35
    Features and conjunctions in visual working memory.Working Memory - 2012 - In Jeremy M. Wolfe & Lynn C. Robertson (eds.), From Perception to Consciousness: Searching with Anne Treisman. Oxford University Press. pp. 369.
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  40. Friends ($20 to $99).Memorial Gifts & Calla Burhoe - 1995 - Zygon 30 (3).
     
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  41.  5
    Amnesia I: Neuroanatomicand clinical issues.Localization Of Memory - 2000 - In Martha J. Farah & Todd E. Feinberg (eds.), Patient-Based Approaches to Cognitive Neuroscience. MIT Press.
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  42.  8
    A surrebuttal.John M. Memory & I. I. I. Charles H. Rose - 2002 - Criminal Justice Ethics 21 (1):55-57.
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  43. Desire,".Mixing Memory - 1976 - American Philosophical Quarterly 13:213-220.
     
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  44.  19
    Daniel Levy and Natan Sznaider (contemp.).Cosmopolitan Memory - 2011 - In Jeffrey K. Olick, Vered Vinitzky-Seroussi & Daniel Levy (eds.), The Collective Memory Reader. Oup Usa. pp. 465.
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  45. Norman M. Weinberger.Forms Of Memory - 1990 - In J. McGaugh, Jerry Weinberger & G. Lynch (eds.), Brain Organization and Memory. Guilford Press.
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  46. Patricia S. Goldman-rakic.Working Memory - 1990 - In J. McGaugh, Jerry Weinberger & G. Lynch (eds.), Brain Organization and Memory. Guilford Press. pp. 285.
     
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  47.  15
    The attorney as moral agent: A critique of Cohen.John M. Memory & I. I. I. Charles H. Rose - 2002 - Criminal Justice Ethics 21 (1):28-39.
  48. Teuvo kohonen.Associative Memory - 1990 - In J. McGaugh, Jerry Weinberger & G. Lynch (eds.), Brain Organization and Memory. Guilford Press. pp. 323.
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  49.  15
    Presentations at the Annual Meeting of the Neuroethics Society: An Index of Online Abstracts Available at Bioethics. net.Memory Manipulation - 2009 - American Journal of Bioethics 9 (1):57-58.
  50.  12
    A surrebuttal.John M. Memory & Charles H. Rose - 2002 - Criminal Justice Ethics 21 (1):55-57.
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