RE: Memes inside brain

From: Richard Brodie (richard@brodietech.com)
Date: Mon Oct 08 2001 - 17:06:59 BST

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    From: "Richard Brodie" <richard@brodietech.com>
    To: <memetics@mmu.ac.uk>
    Subject: RE: Memes inside brain
    Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2001 09:06:59 -0700
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    There's no need to prove memes reside in minds. It's simply a definition.

    -----Original Message-----
    From: fmb-bounces@mmu.ac.uk [mailto:fmb-bounces@mmu.ac.uk]On Behalf Of
    Derek Gatherer
    Sent: Monday, October 8, 2001 5:19 AM
    Subject: Re:Memes inside brain

    A publisher receives a transcript from a new author. He decides to
    publish the book. In my eyes his brain selects memes.

    Derek:
    I don't understand how the example makes any point about memes in brains.
    As in Houghton's shopping list thought experiment that I was mentioning
    before,
    it is unlikely that either the author or the publisher will have memorised
    the transcript. I can only vaguely recall many of the papers I have
    written.
    (I was reading the other day that a film star - I think it was Michael
    Douglas
    turned on the television and saw himself in a movie of which he had,
    initially
    at least, no recollection.) There are of course, people like Koranic or
    Talmiduc scholars who do commit large masses of text to memory, and this
    must have been much more common once than now, but they are a special case.

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    This was distributed via the memetics list associated with the
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