'Lively' memory and 'past' memory. Johnson, O. Hume Studies, 13(2):343–359, 1987.
'Lively' memory and 'past' memory [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
[first paragraph] At the very beginning of the Treatise Hume distinguishes memory from imagination by noting two different features of ideas of memory not shared by ideas of imagination. The distinguishing marks of memory can be described as (1) memory conceived in terms of the liveliness or vivacity of its ideas and (2) memory conceived in terms of the constraints imposed on the order and form of its ideas by the original impressions from which these ideas have been derived. Both of these conceptions of memory, according to Hume in this initial description, serve to distinguish ideas of memory from ideas of imagination. For purposes of brevity I shall call them, respectively, 'lively' memory and 'past' memory.
@article{Johnson1987,
abstract = {[first paragraph] At the very beginning of the Treatise Hume distinguishes memory from imagination by noting two different features of ideas of memory not shared by ideas of imagination. The distinguishing marks of memory can be described as (1) memory conceived in terms of the liveliness or vivacity of its ideas and (2) memory conceived in terms of the constraints imposed on the order and form of its ideas by the original impressions from which these ideas have been derived. Both of these conceptions of memory, according to Hume in this initial description, serve to distinguish ideas of memory from ideas of imagination. For purposes of brevity I shall call them, respectively, 'lively' memory and 'past' memory.},
author = {Johnson, Oliver},
file = {:Users/michaelk/Library/Application Support/Mendeley Desktop/Downloaded/Johnson - 1987 - 'Lively' memory and 'past' memory.pdf:pdf},
journal = {Hume Studies},
number = {2},
pages = {343--359},
title = {{'Lively' memory and 'past' memory}},
url = {https://muse.jhu.edu/article/389747/summary},
volume = {13},
year = {1987}
}

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