Dissertação
The mechanisms of time: delineating the systems for episodic memory and imagination
Fecha
2023-07-06Autor
Werberich, Matheus Diesel
Institución
Resumen
Episodic memory is a mental state in which the subject has an imagistic representation of
some event from his or her personal past. Such representation is usually rich in perceptual,
emotional, and phenomenological details, and is crucial to our notion of personal identity over
time. Since Aristotle, philosophers have wondered about the nature of memory, in particular
about its relationship with imagination. In the last century, the question of whether episodic
memory is a type of imagination has gained considerable prominence, mainly due to findings
from cognitive neuroscience that remembering the past and imagining the future employ the same
brain regions. This issue, known today as the (dis)continuist problem, has divided researchers
between continuists, who argue that there is no fundamental difference between memory and
imagination, and discontinuists, who argue that memory and imagination are fundamentally
distinct mental states and processes. However, in contemporary literature little attention has been
devoted to the meaning of the term “fundamentally distinct”, nor to what criteria are relevant
for delimiting the mechanisms of episodic memory and imagination. The present dissertation
fills this gap by drawing a dialogue between the philosophy of memory and the philosophy of
cognitive science. Through three independent papers, I argue that the concept of “mechanism”
is a fruitful tool for understanding and answering the (dis)continuist problem. Starting from
this mechanistic analysis, I argue that there are no criteria free of pragmatic interests for the
delineation of neurocognitive mechanisms. Therefore, any solution to the (dis)continuist problem
is contingent on a particular framework of research, and we should be pluralists about the
delimitation between episodic memory and imagination.