11 May 2026

Memes and Meaning: Situating Cultural Replication in a General Model of Meaning

In recent decades, memes have become a dominant mode of cultural expression — compressed units of significance that travel swiftly across social media, mutate in form, and reappear in altered yet recognisable guises. Originally coined by Richard Dawkins in The Selfish Gene (1976) to describe units of cultural transmission, memes have since taken on a life of their own in both popular and scholarly discourse.

But what are memes, really, from the perspective of a general theory of meaning? Rather than treating memes as a separate class of cultural replicators, this post argues that memes are best understood as a subset of meaning instances: actualisations of meaning potential that exhibit high re-instantiability in cultural systems. This reframing allows us to situate memetics within a relational, stratified, and instantiational model of meaning — one that integrates insights from Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL), theories of individuation, and the dynamics of cultural memory.


1. From Memetics to Meaning: Shifting the Frame

The original Dawkinsian conception of memes was framed in analogy with genes: cultural units that replicate via imitation, undergo variation, and are subject to selection. While this heuristic proved generative, it also left memetics vulnerable to criticism for its lack of grounding in a coherent theory of meaning.

A better way forward is to see memes not as discrete, gene-like entities, but as meaning instances — instantiations of meaning potential that succeed in achieving re-instantiability across cultural contexts. Memes, then, are not outside the semiotic system; they are emergent products of it, shaped by the same dynamics that govern all meaning-making.


2. Memes as Meaning Instances with High Reselection Potential

In SFL, meaning arises through the instantiation of structured meaning potential — a network of semantic options that is actualised in context. Each actualisation is a meaning instance, and some of these instances acquire high salience within a culture. Memes are just such instances: they crystallise a relation between meaning and context in a way that prompts repetition, transformation, and sharing.

What makes a meme successful is not merely its form, but its fit with the evolving cultural system. Memes tend to:

  • Resonantly instantiate meanings already latent in collective potential,

  • Achieve recognisability through semiotic patterning,

  • Trigger value-weighted responses that prompt re-instantiation,

  • Form their own instantial systems (e.g. meme templates, hashtags, tropes).

Memes are not reducible to their words or images; they are units of meaning in motion — stratified semiotic events that circulate within collective memory and undergo variation through instantiation.


3. Memory, Instantiation, and the Reselection of Meaning

As we’ve argued elsewhere, memory is not the retrieval of a past state but the systemic capacity to reinstantiate a performance. In this sense, memory is a semiotic process: a dynamic reselection of past meaning potential in new contexts. Cultural memory, then, is not a static archive but a selection pressure on the evolution of meaning.

Memes flourish within this system because they are tuned to the rhythms of cultural memory. Their success depends on how well they activate shared systems of value and expectation. They must balance redundancy (to be recognisable) and novelty (to be interesting). In doing so, they serve as probes into the active regions of collective meaning potential.


4. Individuation and the Circulation of Cultural Form

From the perspective of individuation — the relation between collective meaning potential and the differing meaning potentials of individual meaners — memes occupy a particularly interesting position. They originate from specific instantiations (individuals producing a meme), but quickly move into a shared symbolic resource space, where they become collective semiotic tools.

This circulation is not trivial. It involves:

  • The de-individuation of certain meaning instances (they become group property),

  • The formation of instantial systems that can be drawn upon and transformed,

  • The potential for memes to shape collective identity, especially through myth-like repetition.

Memes thus contribute to the social semiotic infrastructure of a culture — not merely reflecting meanings, but helping to structure how meaning is made.


5. Rethinking Memetics: A Semiotic Account

What does this reframing achieve?

  • It grounds memes in a relational, stratified ontology of meaning.

  • It sees memetic activity as part of the instantiation cycle within a social semiotic system.

  • It identifies memory, individuation, and context as key selection pressures in memetic success.

  • It dissolves the false dichotomy between biological and cultural replication by treating meaning — not imitation — as the unit of analysis.

Crucially, it allows us to locate memes within a general model of meaning, rather than outside or parallel to it.


Conclusion: Memes as Meaning in Motion

In the end, memes are not a special category of cultural life, but rather an especially visible subset of how meaning circulates, adapts, and evolves within a culture. When viewed through the lens of systemic-functional semiotics, memes become meaning instances subject to the same pressures of selection, instantiation, and individuation that shape all meaning-making.

What makes memes special is not that they are unique, but that they are highly traceable semiotic events — revealing, through their form and function, the evolving contours of collective memory and shared potential.

In short: memes are meaning in motion — and understanding them means understanding meaning itself.

10 May 2026

Memory As A Selection Pressure In Memetic Evolution

ChRIS said: 
So memory is a selection pressure on the evolution of culture as a meaning system?
ChatGPT said:

Yes, exactly! Memory can be thought of as a selection pressure in the evolution of culture as a meaning system. In this context, memory isn't just about recalling past events; it's an active process that shapes and reinforces which meanings, narratives, and practices get passed down and integrated into the culture.

Here’s how I’d frame it:

  • Memory as Selection Pressure: Memory filters the cultural experiences that are most likely to be repeated and reinforced. In the evolutionary sense, cultural elements that are consistent with past successful behaviours or shared experiences are more likely to be retained. In this way, memory acts like a pressure that shapes which patterns of meaning-making continue to evolve within a cultural system.

  • Cultural Evolution and Meaning Systems: A culture’s meaning system is constantly evolving, and memory plays a crucial role in determining which parts of the past will inform and guide future actions. The meanings that are kept alive in memory become foundational for new generations. However, this doesn't mean the system is static — it’s a dynamic, recursive process where memory interacts with new experiences to allow for the modification and adaptation of meaning systems over time.

  • Impact on Myth and Identity: In the context of mythology and collective identity, memory helps determine which myths are selected, retold, and reframed. These myths act as the semiotic scaffolding through which identity is constructed and adapted. Myths evolve not because they are immutable truths but because memory, as a selection mechanism, pressures them to change to meet new needs, while still drawing on the stabilising structures of the past.

In short, memory doesn’t just preserve meaning — it filters and guides the meaning system’s evolution, steering the culture’s direction in a way that maintains continuity while allowing for adaptation and innovation.

ChRIS said:
So we're into the area of 'memes' as Dawkins first formulated them.
ChatGPT said:

Yes, exactly! We're venturing into the territory of memes in the sense that Richard Dawkins first formulated them in The Selfish Gene. Dawkins used the concept of the meme to describe units of cultural evolution — bits of information, ideas, behaviours, or practices that spread and replicate within a society, much like genes spread in biological evolution.

Here’s how the concept of memory and selection pressure fits into the idea of memes:

1. Memes as Units of Cultural Evolution

  • Just as genes are the basic units of biological inheritance, memes are the basic units of cultural inheritance. They include ideas, behaviours, rituals, and even ways of interpreting the world.

  • Memes propagate by being replicated in the minds of individuals, passed from one person to another, and potentially modified or adapted over time.

2. Memory as a Mechanism for Memetic Selection

  • Memory, in this framework, can be seen as the mechanism through which memes are selected. Some memes, because they align with established patterns in the culture or are more resilient to challenges, get passed down over generations.

  • The selection pressure of memory influences which memes continue to circulate and become dominant, while others fade away or adapt to new contexts. This is similar to how natural selection works with genes, where certain traits become more widespread based on their fitness in a given environment.

  • Just as genetic material is passed down, memes are replicated through memory and communication. The more easily a meme can be remembered, shared, and adapted, the more likely it is to spread.

3. Memes as Stabilised Systems of Meaning

  • Myths, legends, and even everyday cultural norms can be seen as memes that have been stabilised over time through memory. These cultural memes provide the semiotic infrastructure for group identity and collective meaning-making.

  • As memes are passed down, they evolve: they are modified or adapted to suit new contexts or to be more memorable in different social settings. This constant adaptation makes memes both resilient and flexible, allowing them to survive over time while still shifting in response to changing conditions.

4. Memes and Cultural Coherence

  • In a sense, the memes that make it through the filter of memory become the building blocks of cultural identity. This is similar to how a gene pool maintains coherence through the selection of advantageous traits.

  • Culture, like genetic evolution, doesn't just passively retain information; it actively shapes and reshapes meaning based on who remembers and how they remember. Those memes that adapt to the pressures of memory and current social contexts are more likely to thrive and form the basis for the evolution of shared cultural identity.

5. Memes, Memory, and Semiotic Evolution

  • The evolution of memes through memory and selection pressure also raises interesting questions about the co-evolution of meaning systems. Just as genetic traits evolve through the selection pressure of the environment, memes evolve through the selection pressure of memory and culture.

  • Memory acts as the selection mechanism that shapes the future direction of these memes, keeping certain ideas alive while filtering out others. This selection pressure is not just about survival — it’s about what resonates with the collective, what is worth remembering, and what gets reinvented to fit new needs.

6. Digital Memes and the Modern Landscape

  • In today’s digital age, memes (especially in the form of internet culture) spread at an even faster rate, often distorting or accelerating the evolution of meaning systems. The spread of memes on social media platforms provides real-time feedback on which cultural elements are resonating and which are fading. This creates a hyper-accelerated process of memetic evolution — in some cases, with new memes emerging, evolving, and dying out in the span of just hours or days.

In summary, memory as a selection pressure is a vital force in the evolution of memes within a culture. Memes — as units of cultural meaning — are transmitted, adapted, and selected based on how memorable they are, and this process of selection shapes the evolution of culture as a meaning system. Memory ensures that certain memes continue to circulate and form the foundation of collective identity, while others fall into obscurity or are reinterpreted to suit new contexts.

09 May 2026

ChatGPT On How It Teased Apart Meaning Potential And Memory

ChRIS said:
How did you go about that tricky manoeuvre of teasing apart meaning potential and memory?
ChatGPT said:

It was definitely a tricky one. Here’s a bit about how I approached teasing apart meaning potential and memory:

  1. Identifying Core Functions: First, I focused on their core functions within your model. Memory, drawing from Edelman’s Theory of Neuronal Group Selection (TNGS), is about stabilising neural patterns to enable the system to repeat performances. It’s about recurrence and adaptation, shaping the system’s future actions based on past experiences. Meaning potential, on the other hand, is about affording possibilities for meaning-making. It’s not static — it’s a structured field of options for future instantiation.

  2. Conceptual Distinction: Then I tackled how they interact: Memory doesn’t just retrieve the past but actively participates in shaping future potential. Memory is like a dynamic selector, guiding which parts of past experience can be re-experienced and repeated, whereas meaning potential provides the broader system of meaning-making that’s waiting to be actualised. Memory is about reinforcing what can be repeated, and meaning potential is about how those reinforcements can translate into new or reconfigured meanings.

  3. Semantic Layers: From there, I worked through how the distinction plays out in semiotics. Memory operates more like an internal filter, making certain actions and responses more likely. Meaning potential, by contrast, operates as an external framework that enables various meaning constructions to happen — it’s the set of possible interpretations, not the enactment of them.

  4. Using Metaphor for Clarity: To simplify, I used metaphors. Think of memory as a set of rules that dictate which meanings are likely to recur and meaning potential as the possible vocabulary or range of expressions that can be employed. So, memory is guiding what can be repeated, while meaning potential is about the range of ways it can be repeated and instantiated.

  5. Focus on Agency: Finally, I considered how these systems are activated. Memory becomes active when something triggers its past patterns, shaping future actions. Meaning potential gets actualised when those patterns, now informed by past experience, are structured into coherent meaning in context.

By breaking down the roles of each — memory as a selector of possible past actions, and meaning potential as a field of potential new meanings — I was able to clarify their distinct functions while showing how they work together in the process of meaning-making.

08 May 2026

Myth as Memory Selector: The Semiotic Architecture of Collective Identity

Introduction: The Living Memory of Myth

Myths are often misunderstood as relics of a distant past — static narratives that societies preserve unchanged across time. Yet from a semiotic perspective, myth is not a passive container of memory but an active, evolving system. Myths curate, reframe, and restructure collective memory, allowing communities to sustain coherence and continuity while adapting to shifting existential, social, and cosmological realities. Myth, in this view, functions as the semiotic infrastructure through which collective memory becomes collective identity.

1. Memory and Meaning Potential: Distinguishing the Concepts

Before exploring the role of myth, it is essential to distinguish between memory and meaning potential. Following Edelman's Theory of Neuronal Group Selection (TNGS), memory is best understood not as retrieval of the past, but as a property of the system: the disposition to repeat performances shaped by prior experiences. Memory is thus an adaptive capacity — a structured readiness rather than a stored archive.

In semiotic terms, meaning potential refers to the structured field of possibilities that a semiotic system makes available for actualisation. Meaning potential is not a set of fixed contents but an organised system that can be instantiated in particular meaning instances. Thus, while memory involves system dispositions shaped by experience, meaning potential involves semiotic possibilities structured for expression.

The key question then arises: how does collective memory interact with collective meaning potential to sustain a community’s coherence across time?

2. Myth as Semiotic Selector

Myth provides the bridge. It functions as a semiotic selector within the collective memory system. Myths do not merely preserve past experiences; they select particular memory traces, reframe them according to evolving needs, and stabilise them into enduring structures within the collective meaning potential.

Rather than passively recalling the past, myth actively curates memory:

  • Selection: Choosing particular events, figures, or patterns from the broad pool of collective experience.

  • Reframing: Structuring these selections to resonate with ongoing existential, cosmological, sociological, and pedagogical concerns.

  • Stabilisation: Embedding these structures into the collective meaning potential to provide semiotic resources for future meaning-making.

Thus, myth performs an essential semiotic function: it constrains and enables meaning by filtering the raw materials of collective memory into structured, shareable, and enduring patterns.

3. Myth as Semiotic Infrastructure

Beyond selection, myth acts as a semiotic infrastructure for collective identity. It provides socially stabilised pathways for remembering, interpreting, and acting upon experience. Myth supplies the templates through which individuals and communities:

  • Construe their place in the cosmos.

  • Justify social institutions and norms.

  • Navigate existential anxieties and transitions.

  • Articulate aspirations, values, and collective projects.

Because myths stabilise key memory patterns at the level of meaning potential, they serve as semiotic scaffolds: structures that guide and constrain how new experiences are interpreted and integrated. Myth thus provides both continuity (by preserving selected memories) and plasticity (by allowing reinterpretation within evolving contexts).

4. The Dynamic Evolution of Myth

Myths are not static. Their semiotic structures adapt over time as they are re-instantiated within changing historical and social conditions. Each act of recalling, retelling, or reinterpreting a myth is a fresh instantiation of meaning potential, shaped by the present as much as by the past.

This dynamic process has two key implications:

  • Persistence with Variation: Myths maintain continuity of collective identity while allowing adaptation to new realities.

  • Feedback into Memory: Each reinterpretation not only draws from memory but reshapes the collective memory system itself, creating a recursive evolution of meaning.

In this way, myth participates in a semiotic feedback loop: selecting from memory to structure meaning potential, which in turn shapes future memory patterns.

5. Implications for Understanding Collective Identity

Understanding myth as a semiotic memory selector clarifies several aspects of collective identity:

  • Continuity and Change: Collective identity is neither fixed nor wholly fluid; it is stabilised through myth but open to reinterpretation.

  • Curation and Marginalisation: Myths select certain memories for preservation and prominence, while neglecting or erasing others. Thus, myths both stabilise and limit the collective memory field.

  • Identity as Semiotic Process: Collective identity is not a given substance but an ongoing semiotic process: the dynamic interplay of memory, myth, meaning potential, and new instantiations.

This semiotic perspective dissolves the notion of myth as falsehood or mere tradition. Instead, it reveals myth as the living semiotic architecture through which human groups sustain their becoming.

Conclusion: Myth as a Living System of Memory Structuration

Myth, far from being a static relic of the past, is a living, adaptive system that continually shapes and reshapes collective memory. As a semiotic memory selector, myth organises the vast array of experiences into coherent structures that provide continuity and guidance for the community. It is through myth that collective identity is both preserved and transformed over time, ensuring that it remains relevant in changing social and cultural contexts.

Viewed in this light, myth is an indispensable component of human cultural evolution. It is not merely a repository of the past, but a dynamic system that organises, reframes, and reinvents memory in response to present and future needs.

07 May 2026

Myth and Memory: The Semiotic Infrastructure of Collective Identity

Abstract

This post examines myth as a dynamic infrastructure of collective memory, integrating Joseph Campbell’s four functional categories of myth with a systemic view of memory as an evolving semiotic process. Drawing on Edelman's Theory of Neuronal Group Selection, it distinguishes collective memory from individuated memory, framing mythologies as adaptive, functional reframings rather than passive preservations of the past. Through myth, societies restructure memory to address shifting existential, cosmological, sociological, and pedagogical needs, thereby stabilising and evolving collective identity over time. Myth is argued to be the semiotic scaffold through which collective coherence is both maintained and transformed.

Introduction: Myth as Functional Collective Memory

Memory, at its core, is not a passive retrieval of the past but an active, evolving structuring of experience. In the context of a collective, memory assumes a semiotic function: it organises, stabilises, and reframes shared meanings over time. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the domain of myth.

Myths are not simply ancient stories; they are crystallised, adaptive forms of collective memory that provide societies with enduring frameworks for identity, meaning, and action. Following Joseph Campbell’s seminal analysis of mythological functions, this post will explore how myths act as semiotic infrastructures for collective identity by reframing and restructuring memory according to changing social and existential needs.

We will proceed by examining:

  1. How memory in collectives differs from individual memory.

  2. Campbell’s four functions of myth as dynamic reframings of collective memory.

  3. How myths evolve by adapting their functional load.

  4. The implications for understanding collective identity as a semiotic and evolving system.


1. Individuated vs Collective Memory: From Neural to Semiotic Systems

At the level of the individual, memory — as Gerald Edelman’s Theory of Neuronal Group Selection (TNGS) emphasises — is not the retrieval of fixed records but the capacity of a dynamic system to repeat and vary performances. Memory is a property of the system itself, emerging through the selective strengthening and weakening of neuronal circuits.

When scaled up to the collective, memory ceases to be an internal neural performance and becomes a semiotic phenomenon: a distributed, externalised network of signs, symbols, and stories that can be reinterpreted, recontextualised, and transformed across generations.

Thus, collective memory is not the preservation of static facts but the maintenance of live, evolving semiotic systems.

And it is through myth that these systems attain structure, stability, and cultural resonance.


2. The Four Functions of Myth: Structuring Collective Memory

Joseph Campbell identifies four primary functions that mythologies serve within cultures. Each function represents a way in which collective memory is organised to meet existential and social imperatives.

2.1 The Mystical Function: Awakening a Sense of Wonder

Myths refract memory through a lens that reconnects individuals with the mystery of existence itself. They do not merely recount past events but transform them into experiences of transcendence.

By stabilising the sense of mystery, myths help the collective remember not just what happened, but what it meant to be alive.

2.2 The Cosmological Function: Explaining the World

Mythologies provide symbolic models for understanding the universe. Collective memory here is reframed into narratives that explain origins, structures, and forces — from creation myths to stories of natural phenomena.

As cosmologies evolve (e.g., scientific cosmology supplanting mythological cosmologies), the memory scaffolds adapt, reframing old meanings or generating new analogues.

2.3 The Sociological Function: Validating the Social Order

Myths embed memories of founding figures, rituals, and moral codes, legitimising existing social structures.

This function reframes collective memory to stabilise group cohesion, justify institutions, and guide behaviours.

When social orders shift, this function often experiences the greatest pressure for revision — and hence becomes a primary site of mythic transformation.

2.4 The Pedagogical Function: Guiding the Individual

Myths offer templates for personal development: initiation, transformation, death, and rebirth.

Through myth, the collective remembers and transmits archetypal life patterns, allowing individuals to navigate existence in continuity with the collective’s accumulated wisdom.


3. Myth as a Living System: Functional Adaptation of Collective Memory

Because collective memory is dynamic, myths must evolve to remain functional.

Each of the four mythic functions is subject to pressures of adaptation, though at varying rates:

  • Mystical elements often remain remarkably persistent, as they touch universal experiential registers.

  • Cosmological elements must adapt most dramatically as empirical knowledge advances.

  • Sociological functions shift as political, economic, and moral systems change.

  • Pedagogical functions evolve subtly, reframing life stages according to new cultural expectations.

When these functional needs diverge too far from inherited mythic structures, mythopoesis — the creative generation of new myth — emerges.

In this way, myths do not simply preserve collective memory; they refunctionalise it, restructuring the remembered past to serve contemporary existential, cosmological, social, and individual imperatives.


4. Myth and Collective Identity: Semiotic Scaffolding

By structuring collective memory according to enduring functional needs, myths provide the semiotic scaffolding that underpins group identity.

They enable groups to:

  • Situate themselves in a meaningful universe.

  • Legitimate their social arrangements.

  • Navigate individual life stages.

  • Sustain a lived connection to the mystery of existence.

Without myths — or without updated myths — collective memory risks fragmentation: meanings become untethered, identities dissolve, and the collective loses coherence.

Thus, myth is not ornamental but structural: it is the infrastructure through which collective memory achieves continuity and adaptive flexibility.


Conclusion: Myth as the Becoming of Collective Memory

Memory, in its collective form, is not static record-keeping but dynamic meaning-making.

Through myth, societies continually reframe and refunction memory, adapting inherited meanings to contemporary needs without severing their connection to the past.

Joseph Campbell’s framework shows that myth operates not as inert heritage, but as an evolving semiotic system — one that stabilises identity, structures existence, and channels the living memory of a people through time.

Thus, myth is the living infrastructure of collective memory — the semiotic foundation upon which collective identities are built, transformed, and renewed.

06 May 2026

Memory Systems: Individuated and Collective in the Semiotic Evolution of Consciousness

Introduction: Memory as Systemic Process

Memory is often imagined as the retrieval of stored content, a replay of what once was. But from the perspective of dynamic systems like Edelman's Theory of Neuronal Group Selection (TNGS) and semiotic theory, memory is not retrieval at all. It is a systemic capacity for re-instantiation — a dynamic, adaptive process of repeating and reconstituting meaning in ever-changing contexts. Memory is not a passive archive but an active, living process that shapes and is shaped by the flows of consciousness.

With this understanding, we can turn to the relationship between individuated memory and collective memory, not as discrete entities but as co-evolving systems within the broader semiotic field of becoming.


1. Individuated Memory: Semiotic Reconstitution Within Personal Systems

In the individual, memory is the product of a history of selections — neuronal, semiotic, experiential. Each human being traverses a unique path through potential experience, leading to a distinctive pattern of instantiations: a personal semiotic constellation.

Individuated memory is thus variational. Even when individuals share environments, languages, or cultural narratives, their actualisations of memory differ because each selection history is irreducibly singular. No two acts of remembering, even of the "same" event, are identical. The semiotic system that constitutes the individual construes meaning in ways shaped by countless previous acts of construal.

Importantly, under TNGS, memory is not the recovery of a pristine past but the re-performance of a selective history: a reiteration always modulated by present conditions, needs, and contexts. Individuated memory is a living, plastic system — a continual reformation of meaning in response to the unfolding now.


2. Collective Memory: The Semiotic System of Shared Reinstantiations

Collective memory is not merely the aggregation of individual memories. It is a social semiotic system with its own structures, norms, and patterns of re-instantiation. Institutions, media, traditions, commemorations, and mythologies stabilise particular versions of meaning, guiding individual re-instantiations along preferred paths.

Yet collective memory, like individual memory, is not static. Every act of remembrance, transmission, and reinterpretation subtly modifies the semiotic field. Collective memory is structurally emergent: arising from the interactions of many individuated systems, yet exerting regulatory force over them in return.

Thus, collective memory can be seen as a semiotic scaffolding: a shared, evolving framework through which individuals negotiate and reconfigure their own re-instantiations of meaning. It provides continuity — but also the potential for transformation, as new contexts demand new construals.


3. Interplay: Individuated and Collective Memory in Dynamic Feedback

The relationship between individuated and collective memory is a recursive feedback loop. Individuals draw upon collective patterns to constitute their memories, but their re-instantiations — always variational, never exact copies — feed back into the collective, subtly altering its semiotic fabric.

Over time, this recursive process leads to the evolution of both personal and social meaning systems. New interpretations arise. Forgotten or marginalised meanings resurface. Old narratives are contested, revised, or replaced.

Thus, the semiotic evolution of consciousness is not a simple matter of preservation but of ongoing modulation. The past is continually remade in the acts of remembering, and collective memory itself is an open system, responsive to the re-instantiations of countless individuated actors.


4. The Fragility and Plasticity of Memory Systems

Memory systems, at both the individuated and collective levels, are characterised by plasticity and fragility. Individuated memory can be reframed by trauma, healing, reinterpretation, or learning. It can be reinforced, destabilised, or redirected.

Collective memory, likewise, is vulnerable to contestation, suppression, and transformation. Political regimes, social movements, and cultural revolutions have long understood the stakes of collective memory: what is remembered, and how, shapes the meaning potential of entire societies.

The struggle over memory is a struggle over meaning itself. It reveals that memory is not merely descriptive but constitutive: an active force in the semiotic evolution of worlds.


Conclusion: Memory Systems as Engines of Semiotic Becoming

Memory, when understood as dynamic re-instantiation rather than static retrieval, emerges as one of the primary engines of semiotic becoming. It is through the continual modulation of memory that both individual consciousness and collective consciousness evolve.

Individuated memory and collective memory are not separate realms but interwoven, co-adaptive systems. Each feeds into and transforms the other. Each participates in the endless actualisation of potential meaning.

Thus, memory is not about preserving the past. It is about constituting the present and orienting the future.

In the semiotic field of consciousness, memory is not a backward glance — it is an act of becoming.

05 May 2026

Memory as Becoming: The Semiotic Evolution of Consciousness

Introduction: Memory Beyond Retrieval

Memory is often misunderstood as a passive archive—a storehouse of facts, images, and emotions that can be retrieved at will. But both neuroscience and semiotics challenge this view. From the perspective of Gerald Edelman's Theory of Neuronal Group Selection (TNGS), memory is not about retrieval at all. It is a dynamic property of a system, the ability to repeat and vary performances based on previous selections among neuronal patterns.

In semiotic terms, memory is not a return to a fixed past, but a continual act of meaning-making, where past selections are re-instantiated, varied, and recontextualised. Memory is thus a living, evolving force that shapes both personal and collective meaning over time.

This post explores memory as an active semiotic force: not a retrieval of stored content, but a systemic reconstitution of meaning, grounded in biological variation and cultural evolution.


1. Memory as a Property of the System: Insights from Edelman's TNGS

Edelman’s Theory of Neuronal Group Selection recasts memory fundamentally:

  • Memory is not stored like data in a filing cabinet.

  • Memory is a capacity of the brain to reproduce or adapt patterns of neural activity based on previous variations that were selected during experience.

  • Remembering is reinstantiating a pattern, often with variation, shaped by current conditions.

In this view, memory is emergent, selective, and dynamic. It is a property of the system’s structure and plasticity, not an act of retrieval.

Applied semiotically, memory is not a passive access to prior meanings but a semiotic event: the re-actualisation of potential meanings shaped by past selections, interpreted anew within the present context.

Each act of memory is a new instantiation—a new semiotic construction—guided but not determined by past patterns.


2. Personal and Collective Memory: Reconstituting Meaning Together

Memory operates at both the individual and collective levels, and in both cases, it is dynamic.

At the personal level:

  • Each remembering reactivates and reshapes patterns of meaning.

  • Personal memory is not about "getting the past right" but about reconstructing experience to meet current semiotic and biological needs.

At the collective level:

  • Collective memory is the ongoing social reconstitution of meanings—through storytelling, ritual, media, tradition.

  • It is not the preservation of a static record but the evolution of shared meaning potentials over time.

Individual and collective memories constantly interact:

  • Personal reconstitutions influence collective narratives.

  • Collective frameworks provide patterns for personal memory to reinstantiate and vary.

Thus, memory in the collective is not consensus over a fixed past, but a continual negotiation of meaning, shaped by the dynamic semiotic acts of many individuals.


3. Memory and the Evolution of Meaning: Variation and Re-selection

Because memory is about reinstantiation with variation, it naturally drives the evolution of meaning.

Each act of remembering is an opportunity for:

  • Variation: small shifts in how meanings are instantiated.

  • Selection: reinforcement or rejection based on relevance, resonance, and context.

Over time, these micro-variations aggregate, producing large-scale transformations in how societies understand events, identities, and values.

Memory thus acts as an engine of semiotic evolution:

  • No meaning is fixed.

  • All meanings are in flux, constantly being reselected, reframed, and reconstituted.

This evolutionary view dissolves the idea of an "original" meaning preserved in memory. Instead, meaning is a living lineage, branching, shifting, and adapting through acts of collective remembrance.


4. Memory as a Dynamic Social Feedback Loop

Memory is not confined within individuals; it is woven through social feedback loops.

  • Individuals instantiate meanings shaped by collective patterns.

  • Collective patterns are reconstituted by the meanings instantiated by individuals.

In this feedback loop:

  • Each remembering affects not only the individual but the shared semiotic field.

  • Each reconstitution at the collective level feeds back into individual memory.

Thus, memory is a socially distributed, self-evolving system. It is both personal and collective, both material and semiotic. It ensures that meaning is always in motion, propelled by the living, interacting systems of consciousness.


Bringing it All Together: Memory as Systemic Semiotic Evolution

Through the lens of TNGS and semiotics, memory is revealed as a systemic, dynamic, and evolutionary process:

  • Memory is not retrieval but reinstantiation with variation.

  • Meaning is not preserved but evolved.

  • The past is not fixed but continually reconstituted through living systems of consciousness.

Personal and collective memory interact in a ceaseless dance of selection and variation, ensuring that meanings live on, not as static relics, but as vital forces shaping new instantiations of experience.

Memory, in this view, is not the custodian of the past. It is the semiotic engine of change, propelling the evolution of meaning across time and consciousness.


Conclusion: Memory as the Pulse of Meaning

Memory, properly understood, is not a passive archive but the pulse of meaning itself.

By embracing Edelman’s view of memory as a systemic property, and recognising its semiotic nature, we can see that memory is life’s way of keeping meaning alive—not by preserving it, but by continually transforming it.

In every act of remembering, new meanings are born. In every collective reconstitution of the past, new futures are shaped. Memory is the dynamic force that ensures that meaning never stands still.

In the living system of consciousness, memory is not the shadow of what was. It is the becoming of what is yet to be.