Department of Psychology, Harvard University.
Department of Philosophy, York University.
Top Cogn Sci. 2024 Apr;16(2):225-240. doi: 10.1111/tops.12646. Epub 2023 Apr 17.
Human adults distinguish their mental event simulations along various dimensions-most prominently according to their "mnemicity": we track whether these simulations are outcomes of past personal experiences or not (i.e., whether we are "remembering" or "imagining"). This distinction between memory and imagination is commonly thought to reflect a deep architectural distinction in the mind. Against this idea, I argue that mnemicity is not based on a fundamentalstructural difference between memories and imaginations but is instead the result of metacognitive attribution and social construction. On this attributional view, mnemicity is likely a uniquely human capacity that both serves collective functions and has been shaped by collective norms. First, on the individual level, mnemicity attribution is an outcome of metacognitive learning: it relies on acquired interpretations of the phenomenal features of mental event simulations. Such interpretations are in part acquired through interactive reminiscing with other community members. Further, how the distinction between memory and imagination is drawn is likely sensitive to cultural norms about what remembering is, when it is appropriate to claim to remember, what can be remembered, and what remembering entails. As a result, how individuals determine whether they remember or imagine is bound to be deeply enculturated. Second, mnemicity attribution solves an important collective challenge: who to grant epistemic authority about the past. Solving this challenge is important because-for humans-the past represents not just an opportunity to learn about the future but to coordinate present social realities. How a community determines such social realities both draws on individuals' remembering and in turn shapes when, what, and how individuals remember.
人类成年人会沿着各种维度来区分他们的心理事件模拟,其中最突出的维度是根据其“记忆性”:我们追踪这些模拟是否是过去个人经历的结果(即,我们是否在“回忆”或“想象”)。这种记忆和想象之间的区别通常被认为反映了思维中一种深刻的结构差异。然而,我认为,记忆性不是基于记忆和想象之间的基本结构差异,而是元认知归因和社会建构的结果。在这种归因观点中,记忆性可能是人类独有的一种能力,它既服务于集体功能,又受到集体规范的塑造。首先,在个体层面上,记忆性归因是元认知学习的结果:它依赖于对心理事件模拟的现象特征的习得解释。这些解释部分是通过与其他社区成员进行互动回忆获得的。此外,记忆和想象之间的区别是如何划定的,可能对有关记忆是什么、何时可以声称记得、可以记住什么以及记忆意味着什么的文化规范敏感。因此,个人如何确定他们是在回忆还是在想象,必然会受到深刻的文化影响。其次,记忆性归因解决了一个重要的集体挑战:谁有权获得关于过去的认识。解决这个挑战很重要,因为对人类来说,过去不仅是了解未来的机会,还是协调当下社会现实的机会。一个社区如何确定这些社会现实,既依赖于个体的记忆,又反过来影响个体何时、何地以及如何记忆。