This paper introduces Operational Future under Finite Capacity as the third record in the Trace–Continuation under Finite Capacity (TCFC) series of the Synkyria Project. TCFC-01 developed witnessed continuation by showing that admissibility-relevant traces must either be witnessed, safely discharged, or persist as unreviewable burden. TCFC-02 extended this into an action–trace–horizon grammar: under finite capacity, action is not exhausted by immediate execution, because each action leaves trace and each trace reshapes the continuation horizon. TCFC-03 develops the next step: the future itself is not treated as empty possibility, but as an operational horizon already shaped by active traces, expectations, constraints, admissibility conditions, and witness availability. The paper introduces the notions of anticipatory trace, trace foreclosure, and horizon governance. An anticipatory trace is a future-oriented pressure that becomes active in the present before the expected event occurs. Trace foreclosure occurs when the formation of witnessable trace is prematurely closed, narrowed, or replaced before the field has generated its own reviewable structure. Horizon governance names the discipline of protecting the admissible space of continuation under finite capacity. The paper connects this grammar to AI generation, learning, TER runtime evidence, SFV translation, and the “No AI before trace” principle. In AI-facing terms, the concern is not only whether an output is admissible, but whether it closes, narrows, or replaces the trace-formation process required for accountable continuation. In learning and human-scale contexts, premature completion may create trace foreclosure by replacing the learner’s or field’s own emerging trace with an externally supplied form. The paper is an orientation and bridge note, not a complete theory of prediction, language-model inference, learning, phenomenology, or runtime verification. Its contribution is to clarify a structural claim: under finite capacity, the future is operationally shaped by what present action, trace, expectation, and witness make continuable. Series: Trace–Continuation under Finite Capacity (TCFC)Series code: TCFC-03
Panagiotis Kalomoirakis (Sun,) studied this question.