Empirical Inconsistencies Defying Simulationism

In our common understanding, remembering and imagining are two different entities. Yet, with brain research progressing, this common understanding of remembering and imagining changes significantly. Simulationists go as far as to claim that remembering and imagining only differ in their temporal ori...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Saskia Janina Neumann
Format: Article
Language:ces
Published: Institute of Philosophy of the Slovak Academy of Sciences 2023-11-01
Series:Organon F
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Online Access:https://www.sav.sk/journals/uploads/12231442orgf.2023.30404.pdf
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Summary:In our common understanding, remembering and imagining are two different entities. Yet, with brain research progressing, this common understanding of remembering and imagining changes significantly. Simulationists go as far as to claim that remembering and imagining only differ in their temporal orientation but are part of the same system. In what follows, I want to defend our common understanding of how to distinguish between remembering and imagining. With the help of empirical studies, I will defend the view that remembering and imagining are significantly different and not only different in their temporal orientation. I will base my argumentation on empirical studies which are suggestive of simulationism having gotten it wrong. In this paper, I will firstly introduce the two opposing views of simulationism and the causal theory of memory. With the help of empirical studies, I will secondly show that simulationism faces significant evidence of being wrong and thirdly, will suggest that a slightly changed version of the causal theory of memory does a better job in explaining the introduced research results.
ISSN:1335-0668
2585-7150