Looking the past in the eye: Distortion in memory and the costs and benefits of recalling from an observer perspective
- PMID: 28237834
- DOI: 10.1016/j.concog.2017.01.014
Looking the past in the eye: Distortion in memory and the costs and benefits of recalling from an observer perspective
Abstract
Jordi Fernández (2015) discusses the possible benefits of two types of allegedly distorted memories: observer memories and fabricated memories. Fernández argues that even when memory does not preserve the past, some memories can still provide an adaptive benefit for the subject. I explore Fernández's claims focussing on the case of observer perspective memories. For Fernández, observer perspectives are distorted memories because they do not preserve past experience. In contrast, I suggest that observer perspectives can accurately reflect past experience: observer perspectives are not necessarily distorted memories. By looking at the complexity of the relation between remembering trauma from an observer perspective and emotional closure, I also sound a note of caution against Fernández's assertion that observer memories of trauma can be adaptively beneficial. Finally, I suggest that because observer perspectives are not necessarily distorted, but involve a distinct way of thinking about one's past, such memories can be epistemically beneficial.
Keywords: Autobiographical memory; Distorted memory; Memory reconstruction; Observer perspective memory.
Crown Copyright © 2017. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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