1. Fernández’s Functionalism
Debates about causation have dominated analytic philosophy of memory. Causal theorists -old (Martin & Deutscher, 1966) and new (Robins, 2016; 2020a)- have argued that an appropriate causal connection to a past experience is necessary for remembering an event.1 Their simulationist foes, emboldened by some surprising developments in the sciences of memory, have challenged this claim, insisting that such a causal connection is not necessary (Michaelian, 2016a; Michaelian & Sant’Anna, 2019).2 While, from 10,000 feet, the two camps seem clearly distinct and well-fortified, a closer look reveals a surprisingly intricate terrain, crisscrossed by a number of unexplored routes between them (Andonovski, 2021; Langland-Hassan, 2021). Still, there is a growing suspicion that, in light of the empirical developments -and perhaps also the evolving nature of theorizing about memory- a “relaxation of the requirement for a strictly necessary and sufficient condition is welcome” (Lewis, 1966, p. 22).
Recently, Jordi Fernández (2018; 2019) has attempted to provide precisely such a relaxation. Taking inspiration from classic functionalism (Block, 1978; Lewis, 1966), Fernández offers an account on which a mental state qualifies as a memory of a past event just in case it plays the functional role memories play in subjects’ cognitive economies. Two kinds of causal relations, according to Fernández, are constitutive of this role: memories tend to cause beliefs about the occurrence of represented events and they tend to be caused by past experiences of them. On his Functionalist Theory of Memory (FTM):
[F]or any subject S and event e, S remembers e just in case S [is in a mental state that] tends to cause in S a disposition to believe both that e happened and that S experienced e to happen, and [that] tends to be caused in S by having experienced e to happen (2018, p. 64).3,4
FTM, thus, aims to specify the relevant features in virtue of which a mental state qualifies as a state of remembering. It does so iff it realizes the mnemonic role characterized above.5 Yet, the theory doesn’t aim to exhaustively characterize all features of such realizer states. As Fernández points out, a mental state may be representationally and phenomenologically indistinguishable from a realizer state but fail to play the relevant mnemonic role. Such a state is not a state of remembering.
What matters for our purposes, however, is the weakening of the necessity condition favored by causalists. FTM endeavors to do justice to the spirit of causal theories -memories are typically caused by past experiences- while seemingly accommodating the possibility of exceptions. Hence, a given state need not be caused by a past experience in order to qualify as a memory; it only has to realize the relevant functional role in the subject’s mind. In other words, it has to be the kind of state that tends to be caused by past experiences, even if it is not actually caused by such an experience. As long as a state “plays the mnemonic role in me, I qualify as remembering the event” (Fernández, 2018, p. 65).6 The lesson is a classic one: if we just allow for a little wiggle room and let in occasional exceptions to putative psychological laws, we can accumulate all sorts of theoretical gains.7
In this brief comment, I argue that, in the context of memory causation, FTM’s theoretical gains are only apparent. To illustrate this, in section 2, I discuss the conditions in which a token mental state counts as a realization of a functional kind. I propose that it does so just in case it is embedded in a system of the right sort. In section 3, I argue that the debate between causalists and simulationists concerns precisely the existence of such systems. Since FTM tells us very little about this, by-and-large empirical, question, it doesn’t advance the debate about memory causation. I end the paper by exploring the relation between FTM, causal and simulation theories.
2. Relaxation and Realization
Let’s start with a simple point. As welcome as the relaxation of constitutive conditions may be, it cannot be unprincipled. A theory which tells us that “memories are caused by past experiences except when they aren’t” would ring a lot of alarm bells and be rightfully treated as explanatorily suspect.8 Functionalists, thus, may not be able to provide a full catalogue of exceptions, but they do owe us an explanation as to why such exceptions occur. Two main, and closely connected, reasons can be found in the literature. First, the world is complex and messy, so we shouldn’t expect the regularities, psychological or otherwise, to be “tidy” (see, e.g., Pietroski & Rey, 1995). Second, mental states (at least in our world) are realized by physical systems, and -if the functionalists are to be trusted- can indeed be multiply realized by different (kinds of) physical systems. Given that external factors can sometimes affect the functioning of such systems, it would be unreasonable to expect that every token mental state will actually bring about its “proprietary” effects. The limit case is clear. A memory you entertain at t1 will not necessarily cause a disposition to believe something at t2 since, after all, you may be killed between t1 and t2. This standard picture, which Fernández more or less inherits, raises all sorts of pesky questions, which have annoyed philosophers for some time (see, e.g., Fodor, 1991; Schiffer, 1991). One matters here: in virtue of what does a token mental state count as a realization of a functional kind (such as memory)?9
To see the issue, consider a candidate realizer state, which has the relevant representational profile, yet doesn’t bear the causal relation we’re interested in -i.e. it is not caused by a past experience. For example, suppose that I have a seeming recollection of celebrating a past birthday, which causes in me both a belief that this celebration happened and a belief that I‘ve experienced it.10 As it happens, however, the state was not actually caused by my past experience. What should we make of such a token state? Is this a memory that simply plays the mnemonic role imperfectly? Or is it a realization of a different type of state, with a relevantly dissimilar functional profile (say: an imagining)?11 Indeed, is there a principled way of deciding between these two verdicts? Attempting to show how FTM avoids the metaphysical stringency of causal theories, Fernández considers a similar class of cases -so-called “embellishment” cases-, in which subjects seemingly recollect features of events they haven’t previously experienced (2018, pp. 55-56; 2019, pp. 37-38). In a striking move, Fernández then appeals to his intuitions about the kindhood of these token states: “it seems to me that the mental [state] at issue does play the mnemonic role... [It] is the type of [state] that tends to be produced in me by past perceptual experiences” (2019, p. 51, emphasis added).12 Taken on its own, this claim is quite puzzling. Fernández does have a story to tell about intuitions and their role in the specification of memories’ functional roles (see 2019, Ch.1).13 It is, of course, subject to all sorts of methodological concerns, the generation of which has become a serious sport (Papineau, 2020). But whatever we think about the role of intuitions in characterizing functional kinds, we surely cannot expect to have intuitions about whether token states realize a kind. Whether a kind is actually realized depends on how the world is, and we have no reason to think that the intricate functional profiles of individual states would be transparent and available for introspection. Indeed, if we had reliable intuitions about the kindhood of token states, we wouldn’t need to relax the constitutive conditions for remembering. We would just provide a more detailed account, which catalogs the exceptions from the relevant generalizations. Yet, we don’t. In reality, we can’t intuit whether a state functions as a memory any more than we can intuit whether a state functions as a resting state of a sodium channel.
So, how should we think about token states? When, and in virtue of what, do they count as realizations of functional kinds? The answer, already foreshadowed a few times, is straightforward: a token state realizes a functional kind just in case it is embedded in a system with the proper organization, specified by the relevant functionalist theory. Michael Antony (1994) articulates the idea well:
[T]he token must be properly situated in a system of the right sort... A system can be conceived of, roughly, as a set of physical conditions that allow for specific sorts of causal interactions among tokens. A system is of the right sort if the specific types of causal interactions it supports map appropriately onto the set of causal relations dictated by the functionalist theory in question. And a token is properly situated in the system for it to be an instance of a functional type F if it gets paired with F in the aforementioned mapping (in virtue of instantiating an appropriate first-order property) (p. 112, emphasis original).
In our case, a realizing system will be of the right sort if the kinds of causal interactions it supports map appropriately onto the set of causal relations specified by Fernández’s functionalist theory. Accordingly, a token state will be an instance of the functional type *memory* iff it is paired with it in such a mapping (The functional type is a second-order state, which is realized by this first-order token state but can, at least in principle, be realized by different first-order states; see Fernández, 2019, pp. 47-56). As long as the realizing system is of the right sort -and remains intact- a properly situated token state can realize the mnemonic role even if it never actually bears the constitutive causal relations (e.g., in a case when the organism is destroyed). So, whether our candidate state above is a memory depends on whether it is properly situated in a system of the right sort. And, of course, whether this is the case is by-and-large an empirical question (see next section). Fernández, indeed, appreciates the point, observing that, as a matter of fact, the “faculties of perception and memory are related in such a way that perceptual experiences […] do produce [states that realize the mnemonic role]” (2019, p. 51). Yet, he needlessly runs it together with the intuition-supported claim discussed above.14
The account sketched above sits very well with a prominent strategy for characterizing ceteris paribus (CP) laws of the kind functionalists often traffic in (e.g., “other things being equal, memories cause beliefs of a specific kind”). On this strategy, formidably defended by Pietroski & Rey (1995), CP-laws hold only in systems considered in abstraction from external, independently existing factors. They allow for “abnormal” instances because such factors can, and indeed routinely do, affect the functioning of systems under consideration (the world being messy and all). Just how we should understand this notion of independence is one of those pesky questions, which -thank goodness- I’ll not examine here.15 It is worth noting, however, that we need not rely on an excessively robust metaphysics of systems in order to cash it out. We may, rather, think of the treatment of systems in isolation as part of the regular scientific practice of abstraction and idealization -i.e., ignoring some aspects of a phenomenon with the goal of understanding others (This is, indeed, the gloss offered by Pietroski & Rey, 1995). So, an ecumenical pluralism, or a Craver-style perspectivalism (2013), would in principle do just as well.
3. Causation and Mnemonic Roles
Back to business. Here’s the rub: the debate between modern causalists and their foes is best understood as a debate about the existence (in human beings) of systems which support kinds of causal interactions that map onto the set of relations dictated by causal theories of memory. In other words, it is about whether the faculties of memory and perception, roughly speaking, are actually related in the way causal theorists have traditionally supposed they are. So, short of begging the decisive empirical question, Fernández’s functionalism cannot help us settle this debate.
Consider the simulationist position first. Michaelian is quite clear that this is how he understands the dialectic. On the framing offered in his Mental Time Travel (2016a), the empirical results -which, among other things, show a close processing connection between memory and (future-oriented) imagination- are taken to be “surprising” precisely because they upend the picture that has dominated the conceptualization of memory since at least the 1960s.16 While Michaelian’s general attitude is clear, he sometimes wavers between two versions of his view (in a way, indeed, that may make some of his readers uncomfortable). On the weak version, he takes the emerging empirical evidence to present a challenge to causal theories, which philosophers should take really seriously.17 This claim is often paired with a programmatic statement about the weight we should put on such evidence when doing philosophy of mind (e.g., Michaelian, 2016b, pp. 65-67). On the strong version, responsible for much of the hype and infamy of the view, the evidence does more than present a serious challenge. It actually shows causal theories to be false. Consider the way in which the empirical picture is leveraged to provide an argument against causalism:
Since imagining a future event trivially does not presuppose the existence of a causal connection between the subject’s thought of the event and his experience of the event, this, in turn, suggests that remembering a past event likewise should not be taken to presuppose the existence of a causal connection between the subject’s thought of the event and his experience of the event: the episodic memory system -[...] appears simply not to be designed in such a way that the presence of such a connection can be taken for granted in every case of genuine remembering (Michaelian & Sant’Anna, 2019, p.14, emphasis added).
In other words, the system that realizes the memory kind (in human beings) actually turns out not to instantiate the functional organization specified by causal theories.
Memory, that is, is not related to perception in quite the way traditional theorists have supposed. Now, there may be cases -perhaps indefinitely many- in which a memory will be causally connected to a past experience. Yet, this should not obscure the purported fact that memory systems are deeply pragmatic, as it were, routinely utilizing information from a variety of sources (more on this below). While there may be good reasons to resist this simulationist conclusion, we should take the claims at face value.
Causal theorists have indeed attempted to resist the conclusion in a variety of ways. Robins, for example, has done important work trying to demonstrate that the strong simulationist thesis is not warranted. Thus, in Robins (2020a), she argues that endorsing a dynamic view of memory processing doesn’t necessitate the abandonment of preservationist theories.18 In Robins (2020b), she takes on Michaelian directly, arguing that the empirical evidence does not license the conclusion that memory and (future-oriented) imagination are states/processes of the same kind (note the role the kindhood claim plays in Michaelian’s argument against causalism presented above). To put her points in our idiom, there may be realizer systems supporting the kinds of causal interactions that map onto the relations specified by a -suitably amended, to be sure- causal theory.19 Werning (2020) reaches a similar conclusion about the necessity of a causal connection in remembering, but his amendment of traditional causal theories is more drastic. On his view, the causal connection to a past experience does important “work”, securing the reliable production of accurate representations by memory systems. Yet, it is not sustained by content-bearing memory traces (in an important sense, then, Werning’s “minimalist” theory is causal but not representational). While his proposal is speculative, it resonates well with an exciting and fruitful research program in the neurosciences (predictive processing). More importantly for our purposes, it illustrates clearly that nothing in the available empirical evidence compels us to accept the simulationist claim about memory causation. Indeed, according to Werning, we are compelled to reject it.20
At this point, it should be obvious why Fernández’s functionalism doesn’t move the needle in the debate between causalists and simulationists. The debate concerns the instantiation of systems of the right sort, and the truth about such instantiation is, as Scully and Mulder used to say, out there. Now, the functionalist may insist that theories of the kind Fernández offers provide important constraints about the kinds of states we can discover when searching for memories. And, perhaps they are right about this.21 Yet, two things should be kept in mind. First, the existence of constraints à la Fernández does not entail that a “stronger” theory -along causalist lines- will not end up being vindicated.22 On the flip side, if it turns out that the kinds of relations posited by FTM are not regularly instantiated, then reserving the name “memory” for a non-actualized kind would be a poor consolation.
What, then, is the relation between FTM and the theories introduced above? Consider Michaelian’s simulation theory (STM) first. FTM and STM are sometimes grouped together as “postcausal” on the grounds that the two theories reject “the core claim of the causal theory”: that a memory has to be actually caused by a past experience (e.g., Michaelian & Robins, 2018, p. 24). In fact, there have been recent attempts to combine them into one -I am tempted to call it a “superfunctionalist”- theory (Langland-Hassan, 2021). I hope that the discussion above hints at why we should be very careful when endeavoring to do so. While it is indeed the case that, in a sense, both FTM and STM “relax” the causal condition, they do so for very different reasons. If my analysis is correct, Fernández’s functionalist should motivate the relaxation by pointing to the fact that external factors will sometimes/often interfere with the functioning of memory systems (the world is messy). When we specify the causal relations constitutive of the functional role of memories, however, we should abstract away from such interference. In other words, theories of memory should consider the functioning of memory systems in “ideal” circumstances.23 And, in ideal circumstances, memories will presumably always bear their constitutive causal relations. Things look quite different on STM. For the simulationist, it is not simply the case that memories occasionally do not bear causal relations that are nevertheless constitutive of their functional roles. Rather, a causal connection to a past experience is not constitutive of memories’ functional roles, even if does in fact sometimes/often obtain. On the theory, a subject remembers a past event just in case they entertain a representation produced a properly functioning episodic system, which ‘aims’ to represent an event from the subject’s personal past (Michaelian, 2016a, p. 107). What is constitutive of the functional role of memories, then, is that they are produced by such a system and such an operation. Michaelian insists that even when the ‘aim’ is to produce an event from the subject’s personal past, the system need not draw on information originating in the past experience of the event. This is despite the fact it may often be most “efficient” to draw on some such information (Michaelian, 2016a, p. 104).24 It is important to realize that, unlike in the case of FTM, this is a claim about the functioning of the episodic system in ideal circumstances. Even if we abstract away from all external interference, it will not be the case that all mnemonic representations will bear causal connections to past experiences. Hence, strictly speaking, Michaelian doesn’t offer a relaxation but a full- blown rejection of the causal condition for remembering. In this sense, the functional organization of memory systems, as described by STM, is quite unlike the organization specified by causal or epistemic theories. Michaelian offers a number of reasons for this proposal, which of course I can’t properly assess here. Yet, the key claim seems to be the one sketched above. Since the purported episodic memory system turns out to be employed in a variety of activities other than remembering -e.g. in future-oriented or counterfactual imagining- its operations will understandably be quite different from what traditional theories have expected them to be. Given all of this, then, we should be wary of grouping FTM and STM under the general umbrella of “postcausal” theories. Moreover, the simulationist would also be troubled by the aprioristic flavor of FTM, a flavor they have tried really hard to get rid of.
So, what about causal theories? FTM may not really be postcausal in the same sense STM is, but it surely is postcausal, right? (After all, it does seemingly reject the core claim of the causal theory). If I am right about the landscape of theses motivating functionalism, then the answer is: not necessarily. We may indeed be able to formulate a causal theory in a way that is congenial to the spirit, if not the letter, of our functionalist. A causalist may argue -in quite good company (Boyd, 1991; Fodor, 1974; Pöyhönen, 2015)- that psychological kinds like remembering are unlikely to participate in “strict” natural laws. Yet, they may still insist that, in an important sense, causal theories are right about the necessity of a causal condition in remembering. Hence, they may choose to formulate the key claim of their theory as a CP-law: “Other things being equal, all memories are appropriately causally connected to past experiences”. Now, the thing to notice is that, given that this nomic generalization will include a CP-clause, the allowed abnormal instances (in which memories will not be causally connected to past experiences) will not constitute exceptions to it. The generalization, i.e., will not purport to hold in all conditions since external factors can, and sometimes do, interfere with the functioning of memory systems. Yet, in the conditions in which it does hold -the ideal conditions appropriate for theory building- it will purport to be exceptionless.25 (The causal theorist will thus be committed to the claim that there won’t be any abnormal cases that cannot in principle be explained by the occurrence of external factors). This impressionistic sketch leaves many important and difficult questions open. Yet, a “hedged” theory of this kind may nevertheless be attractive to some causalists.26 Two key points are worth flagging here. First, to show that such a theory is false, it will be not enough to show that not all memories are causally connected to past experiences, as is sometimes (uncritically) assumed. What needs to be shown is rather that these are not abnormal cases of remembering -a much taller order. Second, and important for our purposes, a hedged causal theory will end up looking surprisingly similar to FTM.27PaceMichaelian & Robins (2018), Fernández’s functionalism may not be genuinely post-causal after all. The devil is in the details.
The general lesson of this section should be familiar to functionalists concerned about the limits of Lewis-style analysis. As Rey (1997, p. 187) puts it in a classic presentation: “At best, what would seem to be available from a priori analysis would be some rough constraints that merely ‘fix the reference’ of mental terms... But to determine what kind [they pick out], we would need the aid of an empirical psychological theory”. The constraints provided by Fernández’s FTM may indeed be suitable (if rough) for fixing the reference of “remembering”. Yet, to uncover the intricate functional profiles of states of remembering, we will need to consult a more detailed, and fully fleshed out, psychological theory.
4. Conclusion
Fernández’s (2018; 2019) functionalist theory of memory aims to relax the causal condition for remembering. On the theory, token memories need not bear causal connections to past experiences. They only have to play the mnemonic functional role, which is constituted by a causal connection to the past. In this paper, I argued that this relaxation doesn’t advance the debate between causal and simulation theories. A token mental state can be taken to play a mnemonic role only if it is embedded in a system of the right sort and the debate concerns precisely the existence of such systems. Moreover, if we examine the most plausible functionalist motivation for relaxing the causal condition -the presence of external interference on memory systems- we may learn something surprising about the theoretical landscape. Fernández’s functionalist theory is not postcausal in the same sense the simulation theory is and may indeed not be postcausal at all.