A biological device built for uptime, not closure.
There is a difference between closure, forgetting, and
termination.
Take the stupidest possible example: a pen. I need to write
something, and I want my favorite black pen. If I find it, the task closes
immediately. Need, search, satisfaction, use. Nothing interesting has to keep
running. The process completed its loop.
But if I cannot find the black pen and settle for a red one,
something different happens. The functional task closes: I can write. But a
small discrepancy remains: where is the black pen?
Most of the time, that discrepancy is too trivial to become
memory. It does not cross into the archive of the self. Two years later, if I
find the pen under a couch cushion, I almost certainly will not think: there it
is, the unresolved black pen of June 2026. It will barely register. The process
died before it became memory.
So the mind does not preserve every unfinished thing. That
would be unbearable. Most unresolved things probably go into a temporary
folder: unfinished but probably unimportant. Desktop clutter, one inch from the
recycle bin.
That folder matters because it lets us distinguish between
unfinishedness and memory. Unfinishedness alone is not enough to become
long-term memory. The organism needs a reason to preserve it. Evolution is not
interested in archiving every loose end. It is interested in keeping what may
matter later.
The event horizon of long-term memory may be the point at
which an experience becomes future-relevant. Not philosophically important.
Biologically important.
Threat crosses. Reward crosses. Shame crosses. Belonging
crosses. Betrayal crosses. Novelty crosses. A failed prediction crosses. A
social wound crosses. Anything that might help the organism anticipate danger,
find safety, preserve status, avoid humiliation, repeat pleasure, or understand
attachment has a better chance of being saved.
The missing black pen evaporates because it usually does not
matter. But if that pen belonged to your dead father, or if losing it caused a
public failure, or if someone stole it in a way that confirmed an old distrust,
then the same object changes category. It is no longer a pen. It is evidence.
It is a cue. It is a future-relevant disturbance.
Borges’s Funes is useful here by contrast. In “Funes
the Memorious,” Borges imagines Ireneo Funes, a poor young man from Fray
Bentos, Uruguay, left paralyzed after being thrown by a horse. He is incapable
of forgetting, and Borges understands the horror of that better than anyone:
this is not a superpower, but a curse.
Funes remembers everything: every object, every scene, every
variation in light. But that is not necessarily intelligence. It may be the
opposite of usable memory. Funes is buried under undigested particulars. No
conclusions, no hierarchy, no compression, no mercy. He does not preserve what
matters; he preserves everything. He has raw footage where a mind needs models.
Human memory is stranger. We do not remember everything, and
that is one of the reasons we can think. But what we do remember may not always
be stored as a conclusion. Sometimes long-term memory is not an answer.
Sometimes it is a process still running.
Not: this happened, file closed.
But: keep modeling this; it may matter again.
That is why some memories feel less like past events and
more like suspended computations. Was I safe? Was I loved? Was I humiliated?
Did I misunderstand? Could I have acted differently? Should I expect this
pattern again? What does this say about me?
The past is not always remembered as a scene. Sometimes it
is remembered as an unfinished task.
This makes human memory different from Funes’s curse. Funes
retains objects and scenes: raw perceptions, almost thing-like in their
solidity, rather than processes, abstractions, or connections. Humans often
have processes that outlive the objects. The details decay, but the unresolved
computation remains.
Of course, not every process is allowed to continue.
Sometimes the system deprioritizes. Sometimes it lets the folder decay.
Sometimes sleep strips a task of urgency without fully resolving it. And
sometimes, under dysfunction or emergency, a process may be effectively
terminated. Alcohol blackout is one example: the body continues, the
conversation continues, behavior continues, but the autobiographical recorder
stops saving. The process burns without leaving a file.
The task manager metaphor helps.
A system may ask: Terminate this task? It is still running.
Unsaved progress may be lost.
And sometimes the organism answers: terminate. The processor
is overheating.
The mind wants closure. The organism wants uptime. Between
the two sits an interface designed by evolution, apparently running Windows
Vista on an aging Intel i5 with forty-seven Chrome tabs open — unsupported
since 2017, but somehow still online.
Ancient threat detection is the McAfee of the nervous
system: allegedly there for protection, but intrusive, processor-intensive,
full of false positives, and impossible to uninstall.
Threat detection is not evil. It exists for a reason. It
kept bodies alive. It noticed danger, remembered predators, tracked betrayal,
monitored social exclusion, scanned the dark, and made sure the organism did
not walk cheerfully into death.
But what protects can also consume. A process designed to
preserve the system can become one of the main reasons the system
underperforms. It keeps scanning. It keeps warning. It keeps finding possible
danger in tone, silence, memory, ambiguity, desire, fatigue, and rooms where
nothing is technically happening.
That is the problem with running processes. They are not
always wrong. Sometimes they are just too expensive.
The mind may prefer closure, but the organism prefers
uptime. Uptime is not peace, not meaning, not resolution. It is the minimum
miracle of continued operation: survival without the luxury of closure.
So maybe a life is not a clean sequence of completed tasks.
Nor is it Funes’s impossible archive of everything. It is something more
unstable: closed loops, decayed clutter, suspended processes, emergency
terminations, and long-term memories that crossed the event horizon because
evolution decided the future might need them.
Most things vanish. Some things conclude. Some things remain
unresolved but harmless. And a few acquire enough gravity to keep trading with
the present.
The past is not always recalled.
Sometimes it is negotiated with.
Sometimes it is still running.