Mining the past to construct the future: Memory and belief as forms of knowledge. Westbury, C. & Dennett, D. C. In Schacter, D. & Scarry, E., editors, Memory, Brain and Belief, pages 11–32. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 2000.
abstract   bibtex   
[first paragraph] Jacques Monod (1974) observed that "ever since its birth in the Ionian islands almost three thousand years ago, Western philosophy has been divided into two seemingly opposed attitudes. According to one of them the true and ultimate reality of the universe can only reside in perfectly immutable forms, unvarying by essence. According to the other, the only real truth resides in flux and evolu-
@incollection{Westbury2000,
abstract = {[first paragraph] Jacques Monod (1974) observed that "ever since its birth in the Ionian islands almost three thousand years ago, Western philosophy has been divided into two seemingly opposed attitudes. According to one of them the true and ultimate reality of the universe can only reside in perfectly immutable forms, unvarying by essence. According to the other, the only real truth resides in flux and evolu-},
address = {Cambridge, MA},
author = {Westbury, Chris and Dennett, Daniel C.},
booktitle = {Memory, Brain and Belief},
editor = {Schacter, Daniel and Scarry, Elaine},
file = {:Users/michaelk/Library/Application Support/Mendeley Desktop/Downloaded/Westbury, Dennett - 2000 - Mining the past to construct the future Memory and belief as forms of knowledge.pdf:pdf},
pages = {11--32},
publisher = {Harvard University Press},
title = {{Mining the past to construct the future: Memory and belief as forms of knowledge}},
year = {2000}
}

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