TWO METAPHORS OF MEMORY IN EARLY MODERN PHILOSOPHY Cover Image

TWO METAPHORS OF MEMORY IN EARLY MODERN PHILOSOPHY
TWO METAPHORS OF MEMORY IN EARLY MODERN PHILOSOPHY

Author(s): Eugeny Malyshkin
Subject(s): Philosophy
Published by: Vilniaus Universiteto Leidykla
Keywords: memory; duration; contraposition of memory and history; memory machines

Summary/Abstract: The article analyses the relation between two metaphors of memory: project and repository. These ancient metaphors in early modern philosophy describe memory as the origin of such a duration which is the foundation of autonomy of contemplating being. That description gives the opportunity to answer the questions: what is the necessity of memory, what is memorabilia (and why memory and mnemonical things are essentially the same), and what it means to remember “by heart”. The concept of duration, which is central for Bergson’s philosophy, has its roots in early modern thinking and is strongly connected with a special kind of memory machine: machine without movement.

  • Issue Year: 2013
  • Issue No: 84
  • Page Range: 36-45
  • Page Count: 10