Book description
A groundbreaking work by one of the world's foremost memory experts
that offers the first framework to explain the basic memory miscues
that we all encounter. Daniel L. Schacter, chairman of Harvard
University's Psychology Department, is internationally recognised as
one of the world's authorities on memory, explains that just as the
seven deadly sins, the seven memory sins appear routinely in everyday
life, and why it is a good thing that they happen and surprisingly
vital to a keen mind. The author explains how transience reflects a
weakening of memory over time, how absent-mindedness occurs when
failures of attention sabotage memory and how blocking happens when we
can't retrieve a name we know well. Three other sins involve distorted
memories: misattribution (assigning a memory to the wrong source),
suggestibility (implanting false memories), and bias (rewriting the
past based on present beliefs). The seventh sin, persistence, concerns
intrusive recollections that we cannot forget Â- even when we wish we
could. Daniel Schacter illustrates decades of research into memory
lapses with compelling, and often bizarre, examples Â- for example,
the violinist who placed a priceless Stradivarius on top of his car
before driving off and the national memory champion who was plagued by
absentmindedness. This book also explores recent research, such as the
imaging of the brain that actually shows memories being formed.
Together the stories and scientific findings examined in How The Mind
Forgets and Remembers will reassure everyone from twenty-somethings
who find their lives too busy to those in their fifties and sixties
who are worried about early Alzheimers. Beautifully written, this
original book provides a fascinating new look at our brains and what
we more generally think of as our minds.