Seaside Home or Seamen's Home?
The recent Brian William scandal in the US is, I think, pertinent to this debate about the fallibility of human memory regarding events that a person claims they were involved in, or witnessed for themselves--or sincerely thought they had.
A popular news anchor is suspended after it turns out a vivid, exciting anecdote he tells is not literally true--a self-serving tale, by the way, that make him look better, or at least braver.
Had he consciously known it was b.s. Williams would hardly have repeated this story in public; on chat shows, at sporting matches and at awards ceremonies, when it could be so easily checked and exposed as fraudulent.
As it eventually was.
Yet, by all accounts, as with the one below from a recent issue of "Vanity Fair", Williams was completely dumbfounded that his memory, of riding in a chopper under fire in a war-zone, was quite mistaken (he was in a follow-up chopper):
The recent Brian William scandal in the US is, I think, pertinent to this debate about the fallibility of human memory regarding events that a person claims they were involved in, or witnessed for themselves--or sincerely thought they had.
A popular news anchor is suspended after it turns out a vivid, exciting anecdote he tells is not literally true--a self-serving tale, by the way, that make him look better, or at least braver.
Had he consciously known it was b.s. Williams would hardly have repeated this story in public; on chat shows, at sporting matches and at awards ceremonies, when it could be so easily checked and exposed as fraudulent.
As it eventually was.
Yet, by all accounts, as with the one below from a recent issue of "Vanity Fair", Williams was completely dumbfounded that his memory, of riding in a chopper under fire in a war-zone, was quite mistaken (he was in a follow-up chopper):
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