What Counts as a Memory? Definitions, Hypotheses, and “Kinding in Progress”
David Colaço
Abstract
Abstract This paper accounts for broad definitions of memory , which extend to paradigmatic memory phenomena, like episodic memory in humans, and phenomena in worms and sea snails. These definitions may seem too broad, suggesting that they extend to phenomena that don’t count as memory or illustrate that memory is not a natural kind. However, these responses fail to consider a definition as a hypothesis . As opposed to construing definitions as expressing memory’s properties, a definition as a hypothesis is the basis to test inferences about phenomena. A definition as a hypothesis is valuable when the “kinding” of phenomena is ongoing.
Topics & Concepts
Cognitive scienceCognitive psychologyNatural (archaeology)Episodic memoryEpistemologyPsychologyComputer scienceCognitionNeuroscienceBiologyPhilosophyPaleontologyMemory and Neural MechanismsMemory Processes and InfluencesNeural dynamics and brain function