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The Cognitive Revolution
The emergence of symbolic thought in Homo sapiens between seventy and thirty thousand years ago—the neurological shift that gave the species the capacity for shared fictions and thus for large-scale cooperation.
Harari's foundational historical threshold: the moment when human language transcended immediate reality (naming objects, signaling danger) and became generative—capable of describing what is not present, what never was, what could be. This enabled shared fictions: gods, nations, totems, laws existing only in collective imagination yet coordinating the behavior of thousands. The Cognitive Revolution was not biological (brain size had stabilized) but neurological—a reorganization producing symbolic thought. Archaeological evidence: sudden appearance of trade networks, complex tools, art, ritual burials. Sapiens could now cooperate with strangers by believing in the same imaginary entities. This, not superior strength or intelligence, enabled dominance.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The revolution's mechanism remains partially mysterious—no consensus on precise timing (estimates range seventy to thirty thousand years ago) or neurological substrate. What is empirically clear: something changed in how Sapiens processed language, and the change was qualitative, not quantitative. The shift enabled displacement—talking about things not present in the immediate environment—and recursion—talking about talk, thinking about
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