01938nam 2200409 n 450 99639031110331620200824120756.0(CKB)4940000000099693(EEBO)2240861282(UnM)99829968e(UnM)99829968(EXLCZ)99494000000009969319950706d1649 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|Solomons recantation, entituled Ecclesiastes, paraphrased[electronic resource] With a soliloquie or meditation upon every chapter. Together with Enchiridion: containing diverse constitutions, very seasonable and usefull for these times. Written by Francis Quarles. With a short relation of his life and deathThe third edition.[Edinburgh] Printed at Edinburgh, by the heires of George Anderson, for Andrew Wilson, and are to be sold at the Plain Stones over against the Stone Shope, at the Signe of the great Book1649[8], 54, [106] pCaption title on pg. [3]: A short relation of the life and death of Mr. Francis Quarles, by Ursula Quarles, his sorrowfull widow.Caption title on pg. 1: Solomons recantation, intitluled, Ecclesiastes; in verse."Enchiridion" has separate title page dated 1649, also printed in Edinburgh; signatures: A-F G⁴; includes index.Reproduction of the original in the Bodleian Library.eebo-0014Conduct of lifeEarly works to 1800Conduct of lifeQuarles Francis1592-1644.709603Quarles Ursulab. 1601.1016772Quarles Francis1659-1664.1021538Cu-RivESCu-RivESCStRLINWaOLNBOOK996390311103316Solomons recantation, entituled Ecclesiastes, paraphrased2423243UNISA04038nam 2200577Ia 450 991101936460332120251116170952.01-282-77474-397866127747441-4443-2820-41-4443-2821-2(CKB)2670000000044068(SSID)ssj0000410922(PQKBManifestationID)11293009(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000410922(PQKBWorkID)10351759(PQKB)10004752(MiAaPQ)EBC589217(BIP)46249516(BIP)28592594(EXLCZ)99267000000004406820100419d2010 uy 0engurcn|||||||||txtccrThe act of remembering toward an understanding of how we recall the past /edited by John H. MaceMalden, MA Wiley-Blackwell2010ix, 406 pNew perspectives in cognitive psychologyBibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph1-4051-8903-7 1-4051-8904-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.The act of remembering the past : an overview / John H. Mace -- From diaries to brain scans : methodological developments in the investigation of autobiographical memory / Christopher T. Ball -- Involuntary remembering and voluntary remembering : how different are they? / John H. Mace -- Accessing autobiographical memories / Martin A. Conway and Catherine Loveday -- Involuntary and voluntary memory sequencing phenomena : an interesting puzzle for the study of autobiographical memory organization and retrieval / Jennifer M. Talarico and John H. Mace -- Spontaneous remembering is the norm : what integrative models tell us about human consciousness and memory / Stan Franklin and Bernard J. Baars -- Priming, automatic recollection, and control of retrieval : toward an integrative retrieval architecture / Alan Richardson-Klavehn -- Understanding autobiographical remembering from a spreading activation perspective / John H. Mace -- Retrieval inhibition in autobiographical memory / Bernhard Pastötter and Karl-Heinz T. Bäuml -- Seeing where we're at : a review of visual perspective and memory retrieval / Heather J. Rice -- The emergence of recollection : how we learn to recall ourselves in the past / Robyn Fivush and Patricia J. Bauer -- You get what you need : the psychosocial functions of remembering / Susan Bluck, Nicole Alea, and Burcu Demiray -- Exploring involuntary recall in posttraumatic stress disorder from an information processing perspective : intrusive images of trauma / Julie Krans ... [et al.] -- Unwanted traumatic intrusions : the role of pre-trauma individual differences in executive control / Johan Verwoerd and Ineke Wessel -- The content, nature, and persistence of intrusive memories in depression / Alishia D. Williams and Michelle L. Moulds.The first volume devoted solely to autobiographical memory retrieval, "The Act of Remembering" serves as a primer of ideas, methodology, and central topics, and lays the groundwork for future research in the field.Contains new, forward-looking theories from leading international scholarsAnswers questions such as: Do we retrieve memories according to when and where we need them? How much conscious control do we have over what we remember? Why are some people more likely than others to have intrusive 'flashbacks' following a stressful event?Pays particular attention to voluntary and involuntary recallNew perspectives in cognitive psychology.Autobiographical memoryMemoryAutobiographical memory.Memory.153.1/23Mace John H1340008MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911019364603321The act of remembering4418657UNINA