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On Memory and Reminiscence
Aristotle (ca. 350 b.c.)
translated by J. I. Beare
Originally published in Ross, W. D. (Ed.) (1930). The
works of Aristotle (vol. 3). Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Part 1
We have, in the next place, to treat of Memory and
Remembering, considering its nature, its cause, and the part
of the soul to which this experience, as well as that of
Recollecting, belongs. For the persons who possess a
retentive memory are not identical with those who excel in
power of recollection; indeed, as a rule, slow people have a
good memory, whereas those who are quick-witted and clever
are better at recollecting.
We must first form a true conception of these objects of
memory, a point on which mistakes are often made. Now to
remember the future is not possible, but this is an object
of opinion or expectation (and indeed there might be
actually a science of expectation, like that of divination,
in which some believe); nor is there memory of the present,
but only sense-perception. For by the latter we know not the
future, nor the past, but the present only. But memory
relates to the past. No one would say that he remembers the
present, when it is present, e.g. a given white object at
the moment when he sees it; nor would one say that he
remembers an object of scientific contemplation at the
moment when he is actually contemplating it, and has it full
before his mind;-of the former he would say only that he
perceives it, of the latter only that he knows it. But when
one has scientific knowledge, or perception, apart from the
actualizations of the faculty concerned, he thus 'remembers'
(that the angles of a triangle are together equal to two
right angles); as to the former, that he learned it, or
thought it out for himself, as to the latter, that he heard,
or saw, it, or had some such sensible experience of it. For
whenever one exercises the faculty of remembering, he must
say within himself, 'I formerly heard (or otherwise
perceived) this,' or 'I formerly had this thought'.
Memory is, therefore, neither Perception nor Conception,
but a state or affection of one of these, conditioned by
lapse of time. As already observed, there is no such thing
as memory of the present while present, for the present is
object only of perception, and the future, of expectation,
but the object of memory is the past. All memory, therefore,
implies a time elapsed; consequently only those animals
which perceive time remember, and the organ whereby they
perceive time is also that whereby they remember.
The subject of 'presentation' has been already considered
in our work On the Soul. Without a presentation
intellectual activity is impossible. For there is in such
activity an incidental affection identical with one also
incidental in geometrical demonstrations. For in the latter
case, though we do not for the purpose of the proof make any
use of the fact that the quantity in the triangle (for
example, which we have drawn) is determinate, we
nevertheless draw it determinate in quantity. So likewise
when one exerts the intellect (e.g. on the subject of first
principles), although the object may not be quantitative,
one envisages it as quantitative, though he thinks it in
abstraction from quantity; while, on the other hand, if the
object of the intellect is essentially of the class of
things that are quantitative, but indeterminate, one
envisages it as if it had determinate quantity, though
subsequently, in thinking it, he abstracts from its
determinateness. Why we cannot exercise the intellect on any
object absolutely apart from the continuous, or apply it
even to non-temporal things unless in connexion with time,
is another question. Now, one must cognize magnitude and
motion by means of the same faculty by which one cognizes
time (i.e. by that which is also the faculty of memory), and
the presentation (involved in such cognition) is an
affection of the sensus communis; whence this follows, viz.
that the cognition of these objects (magnitude, motion time)
is effected by the (said sensus communis, i.e. the) primary
faculty of perception. Accordingly, memory (not merely of
sensible, but) even of intellectual objects involves a
presentation: hence we may conclude that it belongs to the
faculty of intelligence only incidentally, while directly
and essentially it belongs to the primary faculty of
sense-perception.
Hence not only human beings and the beings which possess
opinion or intelligence, but also certain other animals,
possess memory. If memory were a function of (pure)
intellect, it would not have been as it is an attribute of
many of the lower animals, but probably, in that case, no
mortal beings would have had memory; since, even as the case
stands, it is not an attribute of them all, just because all
have not the faculty of perceiving time. Whenever one
actually remembers having seen or heard, or learned,
something, he includes in this act (as we have already
observed) the consciousness of 'formerly'; and the
distinction of 'former' and 'latter' is a distinction in
time.
Accordingly if asked, of which among the parts of the
soul memory is a function, we reply: manifestly of that part
to which 'presentation' appertains; and all objects capable
of being presented (viz. aistheta) are immediately and
properly objects of memory, while those (viz. noeta) which
necessarily involve (but only involve) presentation are
objects of memory incidentally.
One might ask how it is possible that though the
affection (the presentation) alone is present, and the
(related) fact absent, the latter-that which is not
present-is remembered. (The question arises), because it is
clear that we must conceive that which is generated through
sense-perception in the sentient soul, and in the part of
the body which is its seat-viz. that affection the state
whereof we call memory-to be some such thing as a picture.
The process of movement (sensory stimulation) involved the
act of perception stamps in, as it were, a sort of
impression of the percept, just as persons do who make an
impression with a seal. This explains why, in those who are
strongly moved owing to passion, or time of life, no
mnemonic impression is formed; just as no impression would
be formed if the movement of the seal were to impinge on
running water; while there are others in whom, owing to the
receiving surface being frayed, as happens to (the stucco
on) old (chamber) walls, or owing to the hardness of the
receiving surface, the requisite impression is not implanted
at all. Hence both very young and very old persons are
defective in memory; they are in a state of flux, the former
because of their growth, the latter, owing to their decay.
In like manner, also, both those who are too quick and those
who are too slow have bad memories. The former are too soft,
the latter too hard (in the texture of their receiving
organs), so that in the case of the former the presented
image (though imprinted) does not remain in the soul, while
on the latter it is not imprinted at all.
But then, if this truly describes what happens in the
genesis of memory, (the question stated above arises:) when
one remembers, is it this impressed affection that he
remembers, or is it the objective thing from which this was
derived? If the former, it would follow that we remember
nothing which is absent; if the latter, how is it possible
that, though perceiving directly only the impression, we
remember that absent thing which we do not perceive? Granted
that there is in us something like an impression or picture,
why should the perception of the mere impression be memory
of something else, instead of being related to this
impression alone? For when one actually remembers, this
impression is what he contemplates, and this is what he
perceives. How then does he remember what is not present?
One might as well suppose it possible also to see or hear
that which is not present. In reply, we suggest that this
very thing is quite conceivable, nay, actually occurs in
experience. A picture painted on a panel is at once a
picture and a likeness: that is, while one and the same, it
is both of these, although the 'being' of both is not the
same, and one may contemplate it either as a picture, or as
a likeness. Just in the same way we have to conceive that
the mnemonic presentation within us is something which by
itself is merely an object of contemplation, while,
in-relation to something else, it is also a presentation of
that other thing. In so far as it is regarded in itself, it
is only an object of contemplation, or a presentation; but
when considered as relative to something else, e.g. as its
likeness, it is also a mnemonic token. Hence, whenever the
residual sensory process implied by it is actualized in
consciousness, if the soul perceives this in so far as it is
something absolute, it appears to occur as a mere thought or
presentation; but if the soul perceives it qua related to
something else, then,-just as when one contemplates the
painting in the picture as being a likeness, and without
having (at the moment) seen the actual Koriskos,
contemplates it as a likeness of Koriskos, and in that case
the experience involved in this contemplation of it (as
relative) is different from what one has when he
contemplates it simply as a painted figure-(so in the case
of memory we have the analogous difference for), of the
objects in the soul, the one (the unrelated object) presents
itself simply as a thought, but the other (the related
object) just because, as in the painting, it is a likeness,
presents itself as a mnemonic token.
We can now understand why it is that sometimes, when we
have such processes, based on some former act of perception,
occurring in the soul, we do not know whether this really
implies our having had perceptions corresponding to them,
and we doubt whether the case is or is not one of memory.
But occasionally it happens that (while thus doubting) we
get a sudden idea and recollect that we heard or saw
something formerly. This (occurrence of the 'sudden idea')
happens whenever, from contemplating a mental object as
absolute, one changes his point of view, and regards it as
relative to something else.
The opposite (sc. to the case of those who at first do
not recognize their phantasms as mnemonic) also occurs, as
happened in the cases of Antipheron of Oreus and others
suffering from mental derangement; for they were accustomed
to speak of their mere phantasms as facts of their past
experience, and as if remembering them. This takes place
whenever one contemplates what is not a likeness as if it
were a likeness.
Mnemonic exercises aim at preserving one's memory of
something by repeatedly reminding him of it; which implies
nothing else (on the learner's part) than the frequent
contemplation of something (viz. the 'mnemonic', whatever it
may be) as a likeness, and not as out of relation.
As regards the question, therefore, what memory or
remembering is, it has now been shown that it is the state
of a presentation, related as a likeness to that of which it
is a presentation; and as to the question of which of the
faculties within us memory is a function, (it has been
shown) that it is a function of the primary faculty of
sense-perception, i.e. of that faculty whereby we perceive
time.
Part 2
Next comes the subject of Recollection, in dealing with
which we must assume as fundamental the truths elicited
above in our introductory discussions. For recollection is
not the 'recovery' or 'acquisition' of memory; since at the
instant when one at first learns (a fact of science) or
experiences (a particular fact of sense), he does not
thereby 'recover' a memory, inasmuch as none has preceded,
nor does he acquire one ab initio. It is only at the instant
when the aforesaid state or affection (of the aisthesis or
upolepsis) is implanted in the soul that memory exists, and
therefore memory is not itself implanted concurrently with
the continuous implantation of the (original) sensory
experience.
Further: at the very individual and concluding instant
when first (the sensory experience or scientific knowledge)
has been completely implanted, there is then already
established in the person affected the (sensory) affection,
or the scientific knowledge (if one ought to apply the term
'scientific knowledge' to the (mnemonic) state or affection;
and indeed one may well remember, in the 'incidental' sense,
some of the things (i.e. ta katholou) which are properly
objects of scientific knowledge); but to remember, strictly
and properly speaking, is an activity which will not be
immanent until the original experience has undergone lapse
of time. For one remembers now what one saw or otherwise
experienced formerly; the moment of the original experience
and the moment of the memory of it are never identical.
Again, (even when time has elapsed, and one can be said
really to have acquired memory, this is not necessarily
recollection, for firstly) it is obviously possible, without
any present act of recollection, to remember as a continued
consequence of the original perception or other experience;
whereas when (after an interval of obliviscence) one
recovers some scientific knowledge which he had before, or
some perception, or some other experience, the state of
which we above declared to be memory, it is then, and then
only, that this recovery may amount to a recollection of any
of the things aforesaid. But, (though as observed above,
remembering does not necessarily imply recollecting),
recollecting always implies remembering, and actualized
memory follows (upon the successful act of recollecting).
But secondly, even the assertion that recollection is the
reinstatement in consciousness of something which was there
before but had disappeared requires qualification. This
assertion may be true, but it may also be false; for the
same person may twice learn (from some teacher), or twice
discover (i.e. excogitate), the same fact.
Accordingly, the act of recollecting ought (in its
definition) to be distinguished from these acts; i.e.
recollecting must imply in those who recollect the presence
of some spring over and above that from which they
originally learn.
Acts of recollection, as they occur in experience, are
due to the fact that one movement has by nature another that
succeeds it in regular order.
If this order be necessary, whenever a subject
experiences the former of two movements thus connected, it
will (invariably) experience the latter; if, however, the
order be not necessary, but customary, only in the majority
of cases will the subject experience the latter of the two
movements. But it is a fact that there are some movements,
by a single experience of which persons take the impress of
custom more deeply than they do by experiencing others many
times; hence upon seeing some things but once we remember
them better than others which we may have been frequently.
Whenever therefore, we are recollecting, we are
experiencing certain of the antecedent movements until
finally we experience the one after which customarily comes
that which we seek. This explains why we hunt up the series
(of kineseis) having started in thought either from a
present intuition or some other, and from something either
similar, or contrary, to what we seek, or else from that
which is contiguous with it. Such is the empirical ground of
the process of recollection; for the mnemonic movements
involved in these starting-points are in some cases
identical, in others, again, simultaneous, with those of the
idea we seek, while in others they comprise a portion of
them, so that the remnant which one experienced after that
portion (and which still requires to be excited in memory)
is comparatively small.
Thus, then, it is that persons seek to recollect, and
thus, too, it is that they recollect even without the effort
of seeking to do so, viz. when the movement implied in
recollection has supervened on some other which is its
condition. For, as a rule, it is when antecedent movements
of the classes here described have first been excited, that
the particular movement implied in recollection follows.
We need not examine a series of which the beginning and
end lie far apart, in order to see how (by recollection) we
remember; one in which they lie near one another will serve
equally well. For it is clear that the method is in each
case the same, that is, one hunts up the objective series,
without any previous search or previous recollection. For
(there is, besides the natural order, viz. the order of the
pralmata, or events of the primary experience, also a
customary order, and) by the effect of custom the mnemonic
movements tend to succeed one another in a certain order.
Accordingly, therefore, when one wishes to recollect, this
is what he will do: he will try to obtain a beginning of
movement whose sequel shall be the movement which he desires
to reawaken. This explains why attempts at recollection
succeed soonest and best when they start from a beginning
(of some objective series). For, in order of succession, the
mnemonic movements are to one another as the objective facts
(from which they are derived). Accordingly, things arranged
in a fixed order, like the successive demonstrations in
geometry, are easy to remember (or recollect) while badly
arranged subjects are remembered with difficulty.
Recollecting differs also in this respect from
relearning, that one who recollects will be able, somehow,
to move, solely by his own effort, to the term next after
the starting-point. When one cannot do this of himself, but
only by external assistance, he no longer remembers (i.e. he
has totally forgotten, and therefore of course cannot
recollect). It often happens that, though a person cannot
recollect at the moment, yet by seeking he can do so, and
discovers what he seeks. This he succeeds in doing by
setting up many movements, until finally he excites one of a
kind which will have for its sequel the fact he wishes to
recollect. For remembering (which is the condicio sine qua
non of recollecting) is the existence, potentially, in the
mind of a movement capable of stimulating it to the desired
movement, and this, as has been said, in such a way that the
person should be moved (prompted to recollection) from
within himself, i.e. in consequence of movements wholly
contained within himself.
But one must get hold of a starting-point. This explains
why it is that persons are supposed to recollect sometimes
by starting from mnemonic loci. The cause is that they pass
swiftly in thought from one point to another, e.g. from milk
to white, from white to mist, and thence to moist, from
which one remembers Autumn (the 'season of mists'), if this
be the season he is trying to recollect.
It seems true in general that the middle point also among
all things is a good mnemonic starting-point from which to
reach any of them. For if one does not recollect before, he
will do so when he has come to this, or, if not, nothing can
help him; as, e.g. if one were to have in mind the numerical
series denoted by the symbols A, B, G, D, E, Z, I, H, O.
For, if he does not remember what he wants at E, then at E
he remembers O; because from E movement in either direction
is possible, to D or to Z. But, if it is not for one of
these that he is searching, he will remember (what he is
searching for) when he has come to G if he is searching for
H or I. But if (it is) not (for H or I that he is searching,
but for one of the terms that remain), he will remember by
going to A, and so in all cases (in which one starts from a
middle point). The cause of one's sometimes recollecting and
sometimes not, though starting from the same point, is, that
from the same starting-point a movement can be made in
several directions, as, for instance, from G to I or to D.
If, then, the mind has not (when starting from E) moved in
an old path (i.e. one in which it moved first having the
objective experience, and that, therefore, in which
un-'ethized' phusis would have it again move), it tends to
move to the more customary; for (the mind having, by chance
or otherwise, missed moving in the 'old' way) Custom now
assumes the role of Nature. Hence the rapidity with which we
recollect what we frequently think about. For as regular
sequence of events is in accordance with nature, so, too,
regular sequence is observed in the actualization of kinesis
(in consciousness), and here frequency tends to produce (the
regularity of) nature. And since in the realm of nature
occurrences take place which are even contrary to nature, or
fortuitous, the same happens a fortiori in the sphere swayed
by custom, since in this sphere natural law is not similarly
established.
Hence it is that (from the same starting-point) the mind
receives an impulse to move sometimes in the required
direction, and at other times otherwise, (doing the latter)
particularly when something else somehow deflects the mind
from the right direction and attracts it to itself. This
last consideration explains too how it happens that, when we
want to remember a name, we remember one somewhat like it,
indeed, but blunder in reference to (i.e. in pronouncing)
the one we intended.
Thus, then, recollection takes place. But the point of
capital importance is that (for the purpose of recollection)
one should cognize, determinately or indeterminately, the
time-relation (of that which he wishes to recollect). There
is,-let it be taken as a fact,-something by which one
distinguishes a greater and a smaller time; and it is
reasonable to think that one does this in a way analogous to
that in which one discerns (spacial) magnitudes. For it is
not by the mind's reaching out towards them, as some say a
visual ray from the eye does (in seeing), that one thinks of
large things at a distance in space (for even if they are
not there, one may similarly think them); but one does so by
a proportionate mental movement. For there are in the mind
the like figures and movements (i.e. 'like' to those of
objects and events).
Therefore, when one thinks the greater objects, in what will
his thinking those differ from his thinking the smaller? (In
nothing,) because all the internal though smaller are as it
were proportional to the external. Now, as we may assume
within a person something proportional to the forms (of
distant magnitudes), so, too, we may doubtless assume also
something else proportional to their distances. As,
therefore, if one has (psychically) the movement in AB, BE,
he constructs in thought (i.e. knows objectively) GD, since
AG and GD bear equal ratios respectively (to AB and BE), (so
he who recollects also proceeds). Why then does he construct
GD rather than ZH? Is it not because as AG is to AB, so is O
to I? These movements therefore (sc. in AB, BE, and in O:I)
he has simultaneously. But if he wishes to construct to
thought ZH, he has in mind BE in like manner as before (when
constructing GD), but now, instead of (the movements of the
ratio) O:I, he has in mind (those of the ratio K:L; for
K:L::ZA:BA. (See diagram.)
When, therefore, the 'movement' corresponding to the
object and that corresponding to its time concur, then one
actually remembers. If one supposes (himself to move in
these different but concurrent ways) without really doing
so, he supposes himself to remember.
For one may be mistaken, and think that he remembers when
he really does not. But it is not possible, conversely, that
when one actually remembers he should not suppose himself to
remember, but should remember unconsciously. For
remembering, as we have conceived it, essentially implies
consciousness of itself. If, however, the movement
corresponding to the objective fact takes place without that
corresponding to the time, or, if the latter takes place
without the former, one does not remember.
The movement answering to the time is of two kinds.
Sometimes in remembering a fact one has no determinate
time-notion of it, no such notion as that e.g. he did
something or other on the day before yesterday; while in
other cases he has a determinate notion-of the time. Still,
even though one does not remember with actual determination
of the time, he genuinely remembers, none the less.
Persons are wont to say that they remember (something),
but yet do not know when (it occurred, as happens) whenever
they do not know determinately the exact length of time
implied in the 'when'.
It has been already stated that those who have a good
memory are not identical with those who are quick at
recollecting. But the act of recollecting differs from that
of remembering, not only chronologically, but also in this,
that many also of the other animals (as well as man) have
memory, but, of all that we are acquainted with, none, we
venture to say, except man, shares in the faculty of
recollection. The cause of this is that recollection is, as
it were a mode of inference. For he who endeavours to
recollect infers that he formerly saw, or heard, or had some
such experience, and the process (by which he succeeds in
recollecting) is, as it were, a sort of investigation. But
to investigate in this way belongs naturally to those
animals alone which are also endowed with the faculty of
deliberation; (which proves what was said above), for
deliberation is a form of inference.
That the affection is corporeal, i.e. that recollection
is a searching for an 'image' in a corporeal substrate, is
proved by the fact that in some persons, when, despite the
most strenuous application of thought, they have been unable
to recollect, it (viz. the anamnesis = the effort at
recollection) excites a feeling of discomfort, which, even
though they abandon the effort at recollection, persists in
them none the less; and especially in persons of melancholic
temperament. For these are most powerfully moved by
presentations. The reason why the effort of recollection is
not under the control of their will is that, as those who
throw a stone cannot stop it at their will when thrown, so
he who tries to recollect and 'hunts' (after an idea) sets
up a process in a material part, (that) in which resides the
affection. Those who have moisture around that part which is
the centre of sense-perception suffer most discomfort of
this kind. For when once the moisture has been set in motion
it is not easily brought to rest, until the idea which was
sought for has again presented itself, and thus the movement
has found a straight course. For a similar reason bursts of
anger or fits of terror, when once they have excited such
motions, are not at once allayed, even though the angry or
terrified persons (by efforts of will) set up counter
motions, but the passions continue to move them on, in the
same direction as at first, in opposition to such counter
motions. The affection resembles also that in the case of
words, tunes, or sayings, whenever one of them has become
inveterate on the lips. People give them up and resolve to
avoid them; yet again they find themselves humming the
forbidden air, or using the prohibited word. Those whose
upper parts are abnormally large, as is the case with
dwarfs, have abnormally weak memory, as compared with their
opposites, because of the great weight which they have
resting upon the organ of perception, and because their
mnemonic movements are, from the very first, not able to
keep true to a course, but are dispersed, and because, in
the effort at recollection, these movements do not easily
find a direct onward path. Infants and very old persons have
bad memories, owing to the amount of movement going on
within them; for the latter are in process of rapid decay,
the former in process of vigorous growth; and we may add
that children, until considerably advanced in years, are
dwarf-like in their bodily structure. Such then is our
theory as regards memory and remembering their nature, and
the particular organ of the soul by which animals remember;
also as regards recollection, its formal definition, and the
manner and causes-of its performance.
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