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this post was submitted on 17 Sep 2023
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Asklemmy
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Yeah, I think there are mundane answers to this. But "mundane" in this case could include cosmological factors like the universe is a weird temporal foam of timeywimey stuff.
I've heard two theories for this that I think are plausible:
A feeling of familiarity even though this is a brand new situation. Your brain is always trying to determine the best course of action from experiences where you've encountered that problem before. Sometimes we have a false positive where the situation is so similar you "remember it", but it's obviously slightly different and new.
Essentially a memory read/write error. Your brain is recollecting as it's consolidating the memory causing wonkiness (technical term) in your experience. You think you remember, but what you're remembering is actually the present experience.
Or you do remember, it's just very very very recent. The present moment is rather funky when it comes to perception (it's not an instant but more of a sliding window in time) and it's reasonable that things can feel like remembering precisely when you see something because whatever lag there is in "write to memory, read from memory" still fits into that sliding window.