---------- Forwarded message --------- De : Daniel Gregory <daniel.greg...@uni-tuebingen.de> Date: mar. 19 janv. 2021 à 15:03 Subject: Conference announcement - Dreaming and Memory To: <philo...@liv.ac.uk> Cc: Kourken Michaelian <michaelian.kour...@gmail.com>
Dear colleagues, An online conference on the theme of *Dreaming and Memory* will take place on *Monday 22 and Tuesday 23 February 2021*, co-hosted by the Philosophy of Neuroscience research group at the University of Tübingen and the Centre for Philosophy of Memory at the University of Grenoble Alps. Speakers: *Michael Barkasi* (York University): The Nonimmersive Feeling of Pastness as the Phenomenal Manifestation of Remembering *Sven Bernecker* (University of Cologne and University of California, Irvine): Remembering Dreams *Daniel Gregory* (University of Tübingen): We can’t Remember the Past in Dreams but we can Relive it *Manuela Kirberg* (Monash University): Mechanisms of (Dream) Bizarreness: Unconstrained Memory Processes and Spontaneous Cognition *Kourken Michaelian* (University of Grenoble Alps): What do you Remember when you Remember what you Dreamt? *Matthew Soteriou* (King’s College London): Temporal Perspective in Dream and Memory *John Sutton* (Macquarie University): ‘Never did I Discover a Memory in Dreaming’: Halbwachs on Mental Work, Social Frameworks, and Memory Images *Markus Werning* (Ruhr University Bochum) and *Kristina Liefke* (Ruhr University Bochum): Remembering Dreams: The Problem of Reference in Memories of Non-Veridical Experiences Further information about this event, including abstracts and schedule, will be distributed in a couple of weeks, as will a link for registration. Talks will take place in business hours Central European Time. Updates will also be posted to http://phil-mem.org/events/2021-dreaming.php. Best wishes, Daniel Gregory Humboldt Postdoctoral Fellow University of Tübingen Kourken Michaelian, Director, Centre for Philosophy of Memory University of Grenoble Alps -- https://www.vidal-rosset.net/mailing_list_educasupphilo.html