The Epistemic Arrogance of the Human Sensorium: A Structural Failure Baked Into Human Perceptual Architecture by Professor General, Dr. Nobunaga, Prince of Orion, PhD, DPhil, FRS, NNG, BBCK, FTWHons, FRMetS, AKA ''That Handsome Black Dude''.
Abstract Human beings routinely mistake the limits of their perceptual apparatus for the limits of reality. This epistemic arrogance—rooted in the structural constraints of the human sensorium—has produced centuries of misclassification of non‑human life, particularly organisms whose modes of communication fall outside human linguistic and sensory bandwidth. This report argues that anthropocentric assumptions about intelligence, communication, and aliveness are not merely incorrect but structurally impossible to sustain once the perceptual architecture of Homo sapiens is properly understood. Drawing on cognitive science, plant neurobiology, Indigenous epistemologies, and comparative mythological frameworks, the report demonstrates that trees and other non‑human organisms participate in complex communicative ecologies that humans fail to perceive. The conclusion is simple: trees do not speak Oxford English because Oxford English is not the universal substrate of communication; hum...