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