Call for Papers: Successful and Unsuccessful Remembering and Imagining

Guest editors:

Ying-Tung Lin (Institute of Philosophy of Mind and Cognition, National Yang
Ming Chiao Tung University)
Chris McCarroll (Institute of Philosophy of Mind and Cognition, National
Yang Ming Chiao Tung University)
Kourken Michaelian (Centre for Philosophy of Memory, Université Grenoble
Alpes)
Mike Stuart (Institute of Philosophy of Mind and Cognition, National Yang
Ming Chiao Tung University)

The relationship between memory and imagination has intrigued philosophers
for centuries. While some cases of “unsuccessful” remembering may be
categorized as mere imagining, philosophers continue to debate the markers
that distinguish memory from imagination. One exciting new way to approach
the issue is to consider the potential differences in terms of constraints.
The aim of this special issue is to explore memory, imagination, and the
relation between them from a broadly normative perspective.

There has been a great deal of interesting work carried out in the
philosophies of memory and imagination, and it is important to bring
together scholars working on these topics, in the hope that the combined
insights might be greater than the sum of their parts. We invite
contributions for the Special Issue of Philosophy and the Mind Sciences
(PhiMiSci) titled “Successful and Unsuccessful Remembering and Imagining”.
Possible topics for submission include but are not limited to:

* The justification or reliability of remembering and imagining
* Epistemic uses of remembering and imagining
* Skepticism about knowledge in remembering and imagining
* Self and self-knowledge in remembering and imagining
* Epistemic feelings and experiences in remembering and imagining
* Delusion and confabulation
* Normative constraints on remembering and imagining
* The correctness or satisfaction conditions of remembering and imagining

Confirmed contributors include:

Margherita Arcangeli (Institut Jean Nicod) and Jérôme Dokic (Institut Jean
Nicod)
Ruth Byrne (Trinity College Dublin)
Amy Kind (Claremont McKenna College)
Changsheng (Lex) Lai (Shanghai Jiao Tong University)
Peter Langland-Hassan (University of Cincinnati)
Kengo Miyazono (Hokkaido University) and Uku Tooming (University of Tartu)
Daniel Munro (University of Toronto)
Lu Teng (New York University Shanghai)
Fabrice Teroni (University of Geneva)

The deadline for manuscript submissions is February 20, 2023, with the aim
to publish in late 2023. Acceptance of all articles (including invited
submissions) requires 2 clear endorsements; in general, max. 2 rounds of
review are allowed. Prior to final acceptance, all manuscripts receive
additional comments from the Special Issue editors. Author guidelines can
be found here:
https://philosophymindscience.org/index.php/phimisci/about/submissions.
Following official acceptance for inclusion in the SI, we require authors
to format their manuscripts, figures and references exactly according to
the journal guidelines. The support of authors in this process is needed to
keep the journal free-of-cost.

Philosophy and the Mind Sciences (PhiMiSci) (
https://philosophymindscience.org/) focuses on the intersection between
philosophy and the empirical mind sciences. The journal is peer-reviewed
and not-for-profit open-access. It is cost-free for authors and readers.

For further information, please contact Ying-Tung Lin (
linyingt...@nycu.edu.tw) or Chris McCarroll (chrismccarr...@nycu.edu.tw).

CfP:
https://philosophymindscience.org/index.php/phimisci/announcement/view/23

--
Kourken Michaelian
http://phil-mem.org/

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