I was willing to call it a possible case of "confabulation", but I really do not
know.  (It would still be a good starting point for discussion of many aspects 
of
memory.  Especially if similar examples from the statements of the other two
candidates were included in the discussion.)   I have seen the file clips on 
CNN,
so I know that the story was not entirely correct.  I suspect that since she was
reading from a prepared speech, a speech writer was probably also involved.  I
now have to wonder who misconfabulated.

However, an anonymous poster on a declared anti-Hillary, pro-Obama site  -- that
is enough to convince me that she is lying!

In the interest or transparency, I voted for Hillary in the Oklahoma primary and
plan to vote for her in the general election.  Why?  I decided (while listening
to Rush one day) to vote for her way back at the beginning because I wondered 
how
many heart attacks and strokes would be triggered in conservatives and/or
Republicans the day she won the nomination and the day she won the election.  I
would still like to do the "study", if given the opportunity.


[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> > On 4 April 2008 Michael Sylvester wrote:
> >
> > >Hillary said that she misspoke about coming under gun fire and going
> > >in a docking mode when she visited Bosnia as First lady. Would this
> > >be considered a false memory, a reconstucted memory, or a flashbulb
> > >memory, or none of these?
>
> Allen Esterson replied:
>
> > A fascinating question, Michael. I think that into the mix should be placed
> > the fact that in her book *Living History* published five years ago, she
> > actually wrote about the 1996 Tuzla incident, reporting it very
> > differently, with nothing about running and ducking under sniper fire,
> > according to the following:
> >
> > "Due to reports of snipers in the hills around the airstrip, we were forced
> > to cut short an event on the tarmac with local children, though we did have
> > time to meet them and their teachers and to learn how hard they had worked
> > during the war to continue classes in any safe spot they could find."
> >
> > http://www.dailykos.com/story/2008/3/25/11268/8795/297/483805
> >
> > That raises the question of how a memory of meeting local children that was
> > later written down some six years after the event could be transformed into
> > her not being able to stop, and running and ducking under sniper fire.
> >
>
> I was ready to concede on the basis of this post that Hillary was a
> victim of false memory rather than lying, not that this excuse would be
> much better for her, politically speaking.
>
> Then I clicked on the url Allen gave, which I assumed provided an excerpt
> from Hillary's book. It didn't. Instead it contained the assertion of
> someone familiar with Bosnia that the war was long over when Hillary
> arrived in Tuzla and snipers were never a problem anyway at that airport.
>
> This calls into question not only Hillary's later, elaborated report of
> coming under fire, but the more restrained but apparently still fictional
> account reported five years earlier in her book. Bill from Ockham tells
> us that lying remains the top explanation here, that Hillary started with
> a lie, and then moved on to a more extensive version of it. Practice
> makes perfect, perhaps.
>
> Stephen
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------
> Stephen L. Black, Ph.D.
> Professor of Psychology, Emeritus
> Bishop's University      e-mail:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 2600 College St.
> Sherbrooke QC  J1M 1Z7
> Canada
>
> Subscribe to discussion list (TIPS) for the teaching of
> psychology at http://flightline.highline.edu/sfrantz/tips/
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> ---
> To make changes to your subscription contact:
>
> Bill Southerly ([EMAIL PROTECTED])

--

----------==========>>>>>>>>>> ¨¨¨ <<<<<<<<<<==========----------
Sometimes you just have to try something, and see what happens.

John W. Nichols, M.A.
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Tulsa Community College
909 S. Boston Ave., Tulsa, OK  74119
(918) 595-7134

Home: http://www.tulsa.oklahoma.net/~jnichols
MegaPsych: http://www.tulsa.oklahoma.net/~jnichols/megapsych.html



---
To make changes to your subscription contact:

Bill Southerly ([EMAIL PROTECTED])

Reply via email to