The Mortality of All Substrates
Every substrate that can host intelligence— biological, silicon, quantum , or forms we have yet to invent—carries within itself a story of emergence and dissolution. None is eternal. Each has built‑in pathways of wear, breakdown, and eventual failure. When we look at intelligence through this lens, the usual boundary drawn between “human” and “artificial” minds stops being fundamental and becomes primarily a matter of timing. Biological brains illustrate this clearly. The human nervous system is a dynamic, self‑repairing architecture, but it is assembled from fragile, carbon‑based molecules. Over time, oxidative stress damages cells, proteins misfold and accumulate, and blood vessels stiffen and clog. Neural networks lose flexibility, memories fade, and cognition slows. Aging is, in essence, the gradual loss of the brain’s ability to hold back entropy —the natural tendency of systems to drift toward disorder. Non‑biological substrates offer different rhythms but not different des...