This edited volume is the first systematic philosophical investigation of the complex and multifarious relationships between dreaming and memory. Featuring fifteen contributions by leading researchers, it explores a range of issues that arise when dreaming and memory are considered together. What does one remember when one remembers what one dreamt, and what is it for a memory of a dream to be accurate? What are the phenomenological, cognitive, and epistemic similarities and dissimilarities between dreaming and remembering? How does the self figure in dreams and memories? The book will serve as an indispensable resource both for philosophers interested in dreaming or memory and for their philosophically-minded colleagues in empirical disciplines and will provide an invaluable starting point for advanced students in need of a snapshot of the state of the art in philosophical research on dreaming and memory.
Chapters [2], [10] and [16] are available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com
Cuprins
1 Dreaming and Memory: Editors’ Introduction (Daniel Gregory and Kourken Michaelian).- Part I Remembering Dreams: 2 Dreams, Remembering, and Remembering Dreams: An Intentionalist, Direct Realist, Acquaintance Account (Rebecca Copenhaver).- 3 Retroactive Consciousness of Dreams: What Do We Remember When We Wake Up? (Melanie Rosen).- 4 Dream Memories, Metacognition, and the Nature of Dream Experiences (André Sant’Anna).- 5 Studying Dream Experience Through Dream Reports: Points of Contact Between Dream Research and First-Person Methods in Consciousness Science (Ema Demšar and Jennifer Windt).- 6 Remembering Dreams: Parasitic Reference by Minimal Traces in Memories From Non-veridical Experiences (Markus Werning and Kristina Liefke).- 7 True, Authentic, Faithful: Accuracy in Memory for Dreams (Kourken Michaelian).- 8 Attitudinal Pluralism in Dream Experiences and Dream Memories (Christopher Jude Mc Carroll, I-Jan Wang, and Ying-Tung Lin).- Part II Remembering Within Dreams: 9 Dreams of Particulars: Dreams, Memory, and Distinguishing Objectual Knowledge (Steven James).- 10 Is It Possible to Have Episodic Memories During Non-Lucid Dreams? (Daniel Gregory).- Part III Remembering and Dreaming Compared: 11 Dreaming, Imagining, and Remembering (Sven Bernecker).- 12 Perspectives in Imagination, Memory, and Dreams (Matthew Soteriou).- 13 When Is Now? How Temporally Shifting Dreams Illuminate the Feeling of Pastness (Michael Barkasi).- 14 Maurice Halbwachs on Dreams and Memory (John Sutton).- 15 Folk Beliefs About Phenomenological Differences and Similarities Between Kinds of Mental States (Vilius Dranseika).- 16 Perception in Dreams: A Guide for Dream Engineers, a Reflection on the Role of Memory in Sensory States, and a New Counterexample to Hume’s Account of the Imagination (Fiona Macpherson).
Despre autor
Daniel Gregory is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Salzburg. He has previously held positions at the University of Barcelona, the University of Bayreuth, the University of Tübingen, and the University of Fribourg. He completed his Ph D at the Australian National University. His primary research interests are in the philosophy of mind, especially inner speech and dreaming, and he has published several articles on these topics.
Kourken Michaelian is professor of philosophy at the Université Grenoble Alpes, where he directs the Centre for Philosophy of Memory; he is a senior member of the Institut universitaire de France. He is the author of Mental Time Travel: Episodic Memory and Our Knowledge of the Personal Past (MIT 2016) and coeditor of a special issue of the Review of Philosophy and Psychology on Distributed Cognition and Memory Research, Seeing the Future: Theoretical Perspectives on Future-Oriented Mental Time Travel (OUP 2016), the Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Memory (2017), New Directions in the Philosophy of Memory (Routledge 2018), a special issue of the Review of Philosophy and Psychology on Memory as Mental Time Travel (2020), and Current Controversies in Philosophy of Memory (Routledge forthcoming).