Remembering the Personal Past: Beyond the Boundaries of Imagination
Christopher Jude McCarroll
Abstract
What is the relation between episodic memory and episodic (or experiential) imagination? According to the causal theory of memory, memory differs from imagination because remembering entails the existence of a continuous causal connection between one's original experience of an event and one's subsequent memory, a connection that is maintained by a memory trace. The simulation theory rejects this conception of memory, arguing against the necessity of a memory trace for successful remembering. I show that the simulation theory faces two serious problems, which are better explained by appealing to a causal connection maintained by a memory trace. Remembering the personal past is not the same as imagining.
Topics & Concepts
TRACE (psycholinguistics)Episodic memoryPsychologyReconstructive memoryAutobiographical memoryConnection (principal bundle)EngramCognitive psychologyRelation (database)Experiential learningCognitive scienceSemantic memoryEvent (particle physics)Explicit memoryCognitionRecallComputer sciencePhilosophyNeuroscienceQuantum mechanicsDatabaseStructural engineeringPhysicsEngineeringMathematics educationLinguisticsMemory and Neural MechanismsMemory Processes and InfluencesIdentity, Memory, and Therapy