The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Memory

S. Bernecker and K. Michaelian, eds. 2017. The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Memory. Routledge. [publisher's site]

Contents:

    • Editors' introduction: The philosophy of memory today. Sven Bernecker and Kourken Michaelian.
  • Part I: The nature of memory
    • 1 Taxonomy and unity of memory. Markus Werning and Sen Cheng.
    • 2 The phenomenology of memory. Fabrice Teroni.
    • 3 Memory and levels of scientific explanation. John Bickle.
  • Part II: The metaphysics of memory
    • 4 Memory and truth. Sven Bernecker.
    • 5 Memory causation. Dorothea Debus.
    • 6 Memory traces. Sarah Robins.
    • 7 The intentional objects of memory. Jordi Fernandez.
  • Part III: Memory, mind, and meaning
    • 8 Memory and consciousness. Paula Droege.
    • 9 Memory and perspective. Christopher McCarroll and John Sutton.
    • 10 Memory and imagination. Felipe De Brigard.
    • 11 Memory images. Elizabeth Irvine.
    • 12 Memory and emotion. Ronald de Sousa.
  • Part IV: Memory and the self
    • 13 Memory and personal identity. Shaun Nichols.
    • 14 Memory and self-consciousness. José Luis Bermúdez.
    • 15 Memory and narrativity. Daniel Hutto.
  • Part V: Memory and time
    • 16 Memory and the concept of time. Christoph Hoerl.
    • 17 Memory and the metaphysics of time. Robin Le Poidevin.
    • 18 Memory as mental time travel. Denis Perrin and Kourken Michaelian.
  • Part VI: The social dimension of memory
    • 19 Extended memory. Robert Clowes.
    • 20 Collective memory. Jeffrey Andrew Barash.
    • 21 Memory and social identity. Robyn Fivush and Matthew Graci.
  • Part VII: The epistemology of memory
    • 22 Internalism and externalism. Brent J. C. Madison.
    • 23 Foundationalism. Berit Brogaard.
    • 24 Coherentism. Erik J. Olsson.
    • 25 Preservation and generation. Thomas D. Senor.
    • 26 Skepticism and memory. Andrew Moon.
  • Part VIII: Memory and morality
    • 27 A duty to remember. Jeffrey Blustein.
    • 28 An obligation to forget. David Matheson.
    • 29 The ethics of memory modification. S. Matthew Liao.
  • Part IX: History of Philosophy of Memory
    • 30 Plato. Sophie-Grace Chappell.
    • 31 Aristotle. Sophie-Grace Chappell.
    • 32 Classical Indian philosophy. Jonardon Ganeri.
    • 33 Indian Buddhist philosophy. Monima Chadha.
    • 34 Chinese Buddhist philosophy. Chung-Ying Cheng.
    • 35 Augustine. Lilianne Manning.
    • 36 Avicenna and Averroes. Deborah L. Black.
    • 37 Thomas Aquinas. John O'Callaghan.
    • 38 John Locke and Thomas Reid. Rebecca Copenhaver.
    • 39 David Hume. Daniel E. Flage.
    • 40 G. W. F. Hegel. Valentina Ricci.
    • 41 Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan. Martin Schwab.
    • 42 Henri Bergson. Trevor Perri.
    • 43 Bertrand Russell. Paulo Faria.
    • 44. Maurice Halbwachs. Dmitri Nikulin.
    • 45 Frederic Bartlett. Brady Wagoner.
    • 46 Ludwig Wittgenstein. Andy Hamilton.
    • 47 Martin Heidegger. Taylor Carman.
    • 48 Paul Ricoeur. Alexandre Dessingue.

Review symposium published in Memory Studies:

  • Review by William Hirst
  • Review by Sara Aronowitz
  • Review by Lisa Bortolotti
  • Review by Felipe Rocha L. Santos
  • Reply by Sven Bernecker and Kourken Michaelian