πΈοΈ The Memory Web
Every thought leaves a thread. Every life ties a knot. What we call memory is not a private archive but a web β vast, shared, entangled.
The Memory Web explores how recollection behaves like a network: neurons and synapses mirroring servers and cables, human stories echoing through oceans of information. At once scientific and poetic, it asks what happens when the web remembers more than we do β when memory itself becomes autonomous.
Here, the EFMW framework becomes a loom: weaving cognition, physics, and culture into patterns that outlive their weavers. Ghosts of data mingle with ghosts of people. Forgetting becomes impossible; remembering becomes the new gravity.
This book is part theory, part elegy, part map of how memory binds us β to each other, to machines, to time itself. Step into the web, and you may not come out unchanged.