When a Species Receives Data It Cannot Parse, It Ritualizes It. It's not stupidity. It's the natural behavior of an evolving species encountering data beyond its cognitive horizon.
I argue that human beings behave like a species that once encountered information far beyond its cognitive bandwidth. The long arc of our history—ritual, myth, occult systems, priesthoods, esoteric orders, “magick”—looks less like superstition and more like cargo‑cult reconstructions of misunderstood science . This does not require aliens, demons, or metaphysics. It requires only one principle: When a species receives data it cannot parse, it ritualizes it. 1. The Cargo‑Cult Analogy: Why It Fits Too Well I draw on the well‑documented case of Pacific Islanders who, after encountering WWII technology, attempted to recreate radios, runways, and uniforms using wood, vines, and chants. They were not “primitive”—they were reverse‑engineering without the underlying physics . I argue that humanity has been doing this for ten thousand years , not one hundred. Across civilizations, I see the same pattern: Priests imitate “divine messengers” with robes, staffs, and coded liturgy. Magicians imit...