<p>This edited volume is the first systematic philosophical investigation of the&nbsp;complex and multifarious relationships between dreaming and memory. Featuring&nbsp;fifteen contributions by leading researchers it explores a range of issues that arise&nbsp;when dreaming and memory are considered together. What does one remember&nbsp;when one remembers what one dreamt and what is it for a memory of a dream&nbsp;to be accurate? What are the phenomenological cognitive and epistemic&nbsp;similarities and dissimilarities between dreaming and remembering? How does&nbsp;the self figure in dreams and memories? The book will serve as an indispensable&nbsp;resource both for philosophers interested in dreaming or memory and for their&nbsp;philosophically-minded colleagues in empirical disciplines and will provide an&nbsp;invaluable starting point for advanced students in need of a snapshot of the state&nbsp;of the art in philosophical research on dreaming and memory.</p><p>Chapters [2] [10] and [16] are available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com</p>
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