Main results:
1. Development of a new kind of, naturalistically oriented and formally precise, kind of causalism about episodic memory, which presents a new theoretical option in the philosophical and psychological literature.
2. Development of a novel view of memory traces as structurally complex, file-like entities that play causal, informational, and referential roles in episodic memory.
3. A comprehensive defense of the causal necessity thesis in episodic memory, supported by emerging evidence from the sciences of memory.
The project's primary impact is on developments in the philosophy of memory. Three project ideas, presented in the published articles, have been most impactful, as evidence by the citations and the further development of the ideas by other authors. The first pertains to the characterization of claims about memory causation as constitutively linked to claims about the functioning of memory systems, which has motivated recent mechanistic interpretations of the causalism-anticausalism debates. The second is the formulation of a naturalist causalist theory, which employs a notion of physical, model-dependent necessity not characteristic of classical causal theories. This idea significantly impacts the modern debate about causation in episodic memory. The third pertains to the nature and functional role of memory traces and connects to developments in the sciences of memory, including in computational and experimental neuroscience. Despite the recency of their publication, project-related articles have already been cited more than 50 times. A welcome development is the growing interest psychologists and neuroscientists demonstrated for these ideas, as evidence by the engagement with them in academic articles and the invitations to participate in interdisciplinary meetings on memory and memory representation.