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Posted 6 y ago
Responses: 3
I can't remember what I ate this morning but I can recall minutia from 50 years ago. We have a way of filtering out unimportant information or blocking out very stressful moments. On the other hand, stressful times can bring out the best in our memory, good and bad. This is my experience, I do not claim to be an expert.
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Her take on memory and eyewitness testimony is exactly why I can't believe in things like religion and NDE's. I remember her being cited as an authority in the book Religion, Spirituality, and the Near-Death Experience by Mark Fox.
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1SG (Join to see)
She was also quoted in Near-Death Experiences: Understanding vision of the afterlife by John Martin Fischer and Benjamin Mitchelll-Yellin
This included her 3 factors of forming false memories
1. Social pressure to remember
2. Imagining an event as an aid to remembering it
3. being encouraged not to think about whether what one is remembering as happening actually happened.
This included her 3 factors of forming false memories
1. Social pressure to remember
2. Imagining an event as an aid to remembering it
3. being encouraged not to think about whether what one is remembering as happening actually happened.
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1SG (Join to see)
SSG Robert Webster - Sure. The article focuses on the malleability of the human memory. I agree with her on that point regardless of the subject. Sexual Assault allegations, crimes, religion, near-death experiences, alien abductions, etc. Evidence is needed as proof. It is revelation to the first person only, and hearsay to every other, and, consequently, they are not obliged to believe it.
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