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Viruses of the Mind

Dawkins's 1993 essay applying epidemiology to ideas — memes that spread parasitically, replicating for virulence rather than truth, indifferent to host welfare.
Viruses of the Mind (1993) is Richard Dawkins's application of memetic theory to belief systems that spread not because they benefit their hosts but because they are effective replicators. Just as biological viruses exploit cellular machinery to reproduce, memetic viruses exploit cognitive machinery — attention, memory, emotional response, social pressure — to propagate themselves. The essay's target was religion, but its analytical framework applies to any idea possessing high memetic fitness: conspiracy theories, moral panics, advertising slogans, viral misinformation. Dawkins identified the properties that make an idea virulent: emotional charge (triggering fear or outrage), simplicity (easy to remember and retransmit), and social reward (signaling group membership). The selection environment for memes is not a meritocracy of truth but an ecology of attention, and attention is captured by virulence as often as by accuracy. The 2025 AI discourse, dominated by triumphalist and catastrophist memes, exemplifies the dynamic Dawkins diagnosed.
Viruses of the Mind
Viruses of the Mind

In The You On AI Field Guide

The essay appeared in Dennett and His Critics (1993), a festschrift for philosopher Daniel

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