/var/www/html/slimsbulian/lib/SearchEngine/DefaultEngine.php:615 "Search Engine Debug 🔎 🪲"
Engine Type ⚙️: "SLiMS\SearchEngine\DefaultEngine"
SQL ⚙️: array:2 [ "count" => "select count(distinct b.biblio_id) from biblio as b left join mst_publisher as mp on b.publisher_id=mp.publisher_id left join mst_place as mpl on b.publish_place_id=mpl.place_id where b.opac_hide=0 and (b.biblio_id in(select ba.biblio_id from biblio_author as ba left join mst_author as ma on ba.author_id=ma.author_id where ma.author_name like ?))" "query" => "select b.biblio_id, b.title, b.image, b.isbn_issn, b.publish_year, mp.publisher_name as `publisher`, mpl.place_name as `publish_place`, b.labels, b.input_date, b.edition, b.collation, b.series_title, b.call_number from biblio as b left join mst_publisher as mp on b.publisher_id=mp.publisher_id left join mst_place as mpl on b.publish_place_id=mpl.place_id where b.opac_hide=0 and (b.biblio_id in(select ba.biblio_id from biblio_author as ba left join mst_author as ma on ba.author_id=ma.author_id where ma.author_name like ?)) order by b.last_update desc limit 10 offset 0" ]
Bind Value ⚒️: array:1 [ 0 => "%CONNERTON, Paul%" ]
Why are we sometimes unable to remember events, places and objects? This concise overview explores the concept of 'forgetting', and how modern society affects our ability to remember things. It takes ideas from Francis Yates classic work, The Art of Memory, which viewed memory as being dependent on stability, and argues that today's world is full of change, making 'forgetting' characteristic of…