Confirmed by introspection
The Memory Accretion Hypothesis is confirmed by introspection. Ask youself 'why do I think there is a past?' It is because you remember it. We also remember that the stock of memories is constantly being added to. Furthermore we infer that the process will continue, leading to belief in the future.
Recourse to introspection can be controversial in philosophical and psychological debates. Some - such as Descartes - thought that it provided infallible insights ('I think therefore I am'), while others dispute this. For our purposes it is appropriate since in this part of the map we are explicitly concerned with phenomenal aspects of time perception. Indeed it is difficult to see how this kind of claim can be supported other than by appealing to introspection.

I - the person who added this node - am presuming that you - the reader - will share this introspective revelation. Why do you think there is a past, that is being constantly added to? If not because you remember it, then please feel free to challenge this argument.
PAGE NAVIGATOR(Help)
-
The Arrow of Time  »The Arrow of Time 
The experience of time »The experience of time
Passage view components »Passage view components
Flow and direction of time? »Flow and direction of time?
Memory accretion hypothesis  »Memory accretion hypothesis 
Confirmed by introspection
Cannot instantaneously perceive accretion »Cannot instantaneously perceive accretion
Introspection may be unreliable »Introspection may be unreliable
Introspection needs temporal proximity »Introspection needs temporal proximity
+Commentaar (0)
- CitatenVoeg citaat toeList by: CiterankMap
Link[1] Introspection

Citerend uit: Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Geciteerd door: Peter Baldwin 4:51 AM 24 August 2011 GMT
Citerank: (2) 115990Introspection needs temporal proximityIn contemporary philosophy of mind one of the minimal conditions for a process to qualify as introspective is that of temporal proximity - the experience must be part of your currently ongoing mental life, or the very recent past.13EF597B, 115992Current awareness of memoriesWhat we are concerned with here is the current awareness of memories. This is a feature of our currently ongoing mental lives. The current experience of memories is what gives rise to the sense of the flow of time. This point seems to be acknowledged by advocates of the condition (see citation).13EF597B
URL:
Fragment-
Introspection, as the term is used in contemporary philosophy of mind, is a means of learning about one's own currently ongoing, or perhaps very recently past, mental states or processes. You can, of course, learn about your own mind in the same way you learn about others' minds—by reading psychology texts, by observing facial expressions (in a mirror), by examining readouts of brain activity, by noting patterns of past behavior—but it's generally thought that you can also learn about your mind introspectively, in a way that no one else can. But what exactly is introspection? No simple characterization is widely accepted. Although introspection must be a process that yields knowledge only of one's own current mental states, more than one type of process fits this characterization.

Introspection is a key concept in epistemology, since introspective knowledge is often thought to be particularly secure, maybe even immune to skeptical doubt. Introspective knowledge is also often held to be more immediate or direct than sensory knowledge. Both of these putative features of introspection have been cited in support of the idea that introspective knowledge can serve as a ground or foundation for other sorts of knowledge.

Introspection is also central to philosophy of mind, both as a process worth study in its own right and as a court of appeal for other claims about the mind.
+About
PAGE NAVIGATOR(Help)
-
The Arrow of Time  »The Arrow of Time 
The experience of time »The experience of time
Passage view components »Passage view components
Flow and direction of time? »Flow and direction of time?
Memory accretion hypothesis  »Memory accretion hypothesis 
Confirmed by introspection
Cannot instantaneously perceive accretion »Cannot instantaneously perceive accretion
Introspection may be unreliable »Introspection may be unreliable
Introspection needs temporal proximity »Introspection needs temporal proximity