Article ID: CBB001214611

Advice for Improving Memory: Exercising, Strengthening, and Cultivating Natural Memory, 1860--1910 (2014)

unapi

The idea that human memory can be improved appears to be as ancient as the concept of memory itself. For centuries, authors have promised that using artificial mnemonical systems can improve remembering. However, in the late nineteenth century many authors of memory improvement texts emphasized the importance of enhancing natural memory as opposed to developing artificial memory systems. In doing so, they portrayed natural memory as something analogous to other body functions and parts, such as muscles, and promoted a metaphorical view of memory that did not rely wholly on the more familiar root metaphors of storage and inscription. At the same time, they stressed that natural memory could be reconciled with moral purposes, especially through notions of exercise, training, and discipline. This article explores these ideas and how they chimed with Victorian concerns about free will, the education of the young, moral imperatives around self-improvement, and the increasing interest in science and especially a science of the mind.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001214611/

Similar Citations

Article Gerson, Gal; (2009)
Culture and Ideology in Ian Suttie's Theory of Mind (/isis/citation/CBB000931966/)

Article Vrettos, Athena; (2007)
Displaced Memories in Victorian Fiction and Psychology (/isis/citation/CBB001030101/)

Article Perletti, Greta; (2010)
Dickens, Victorian Mental Sciences and Mnemonic Errancy (/isis/citation/CBB001022459/)

Book Seigel, Jerrold E.; (2005)
The Idea of the Self: Thought and Experience in Western Europe since the Seventeenth Century (/isis/citation/CBB000930043/)

Chapter Klein, Herbert; (2007)
The Mechanical Age: Nineteenth-Century Materialism and the Human Mind (/isis/citation/CBB001035840/)

Thesis Staley, Thomas William; (2004)
Making Sense in Nineteenth-Century Britain: Affinities of the Philosophy ofMind, c.1820--1860 (/isis/citation/CBB001562130/)

Book Schacter, Daniel L.; (2001)
Forgotten Ideas, Neglected Pioneers: Richard Semon and the Story of Memory (/isis/citation/CBB000350455/)

Article Obiols, Jordi E.; Berrios, German E.; (2009)
The Historical Roots of Theory of Mind: The Work of James Mark Baldwin (/isis/citation/CBB000932526/)

Book Pietro Gori; (2018)
Ernst Mach: tra scienza e filosofia (/isis/citation/CBB991429309/)

Article Quéré, Louis; (2010)
George Herbert Mead (/isis/citation/CBB001252104/)

Chapter McCalman, Iain; (2011)
Alfred Wallace's Conversion: Plebeian Radicalism and the Spiritual Evolution of the Mind (/isis/citation/CBB001201381/)

Article Smith, Roger; (2005)
The History of Psychological Categories (/isis/citation/CBB000501585/)

Book Winter, Alison; (2012)
Memory: Fragments of a Modern History (/isis/citation/CBB001251122/)

Chapter Hodgkin, Katharine; (2012)
Elizabeth Isham's Everlasting Library: Memory and Self in Early Modern Autobiography (/isis/citation/CBB001201498/)

Article Rousseau, George; (2007)
“Brainomania”: Brain, Mind and Soul in the Long Eighteenth Century (/isis/citation/CBB001032675/)

Article Birman, Joel; (2009)
Tradição, memória e arquivo da brasilidade: sobre o inconsciente em Mário de Andrade (/isis/citation/CBB000932949/)

Thesis Slavet, Eliza Farro; (2007)
Freud's “Moses”: Memory Material and Immaterial (/isis/citation/CBB001560622/)

Article Emily Thomas; (2015)
Hilda Oakeley on Idealism, History and the Real Past (/isis/citation/CBB397981761/)

Authors & Contributors
Perletti, Greta
Gori, Pietro
Thomas, Emily
Winter, Alison
Vrettos, Athena
Staley, Thomas William
Concepts
Psychology
Philosophy of mind
Memory
Philosophy
Psychoanalysis
Science and literature
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
18th century
20th century
Early modern
21st century
Places
Great Britain
Germany
United States
France
Europe
Brazil
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment