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    On the RTM, all that one is directly aware of in memory a... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→The Representative Theory of Memory (RTM) leads to skepticism about the past

    On the RTM, all that one is directly aware of in memory are ideas, not past events themselves

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Justifying beliefs about the past on the RTM requires an argument from premises ...No such argument from present ideas to past reality is available, for the same r...The Representative Theory of Memory (RTM) leads to skepticism about the past

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    Ordinary memory-images of perceiving an event (e.g. recalling the sigh...77%I am aware of the specific temporal order of many of my past experienc...77%Judgement cannot consist in awareness of ideas not present to our mind...77%We only ever perceive what is past.76%

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    Reid argues that for exactly similar reasons, the RTM leads to skepticism about the past. If we begin with the thesis that in memory all that one is aware of are ideas, then in order to justify beliefs about the past one will have to provide an argument with premises about our present ideas and a conclusion that the past is how we remember it. But there is no more reason to think that such an argument will be forthcoming than there is for thinking that on the basis of our ideas of sense we can

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