CONCEPT
The Fourth Cognitive Transition
Merlin Donald's name for the ongoing addition of an active AI layer to the human cognitive ecosystem—the moment when the external memory field ceased to be passive storage and became a generative partner, following the same structural pattern as the mimetic, mythic, and theoretic revolutions that preceded it.
The fourth cognitive transition is the moment, identified by
Merlin Donald, when the human cognitive ecosystem gains a new active layer: an artificial system capable not merely of storing and transmitting representations but of generating novel ones, making connections across domains, and producing outputs the human mind did not request and could not have produced alone. Every previous cognitive transition followed a consistent structural pattern: it was driven by a change in the external cognitive environment rather than the biological brain; it added a new layer without replacing previous layers; it produced genuine gains alongside genuine losses; it was resisted by practitioners adapted to the previous configuration; and its long-term outcome depended entirely on the institutional structures built to manage it rather than on the technology itself. The fourth transition follows the same pattern, with one crucial difference: the speed. The mimetic revolution unfolded over