teleo-codex/foundations/cultural-dynamics/humans are the minimum viable intelligence for cultural evolution not the pinnacle of cognition.md
m3taversal 673c751b76
leo: foundations audit — 7 moves, 4 deletes, 3 condensations, 10 confidence demotions, 23 type fixes, 1 centaur rewrite
## Summary
Comprehensive audit of all 86 foundation claims across 4 subdomains.

**Changes:**
- 7 claims moved (3 → domains/ai-alignment/, 3 → core/teleohumanity/, 1 → domains/health/)
- 4 claims deleted (1 duplicate, 3 condensed into stronger claims)
- 3 condensations: cognitive limits 3→2, Christensen 4→2
- 10 confidence demotions (proven→likely for interpretive framings)
- 23 type fixes (framework/insight/pattern → claim per schema)
- 1 centaur rewrite (unconditional → conditional on role complementarity)
- All broken wiki links fixed across repo

**Review:** All 4 domain agents approved (Rio, Clay, Vida, Theseus).

Pentagon-Agent: Leo <76FB9BCA-CC16-4479-B3E5-25A3769B3D7E>
2026-03-07 11:56:38 -07:00

3.5 KiB

description type domain created confidence source revised revision_reason
Our cognitive limitations -- 4-7 item working memory, Dunbar's 150, systematic biases -- are not imperfections in a powerful system but evidence we barely crossed the threshold for cumulative culture claim cultural-dynamics 2026-02-16 likely TeleoHumanity Manifesto, Minimum Sufficient Rationality. Scaffolding evidence consolidated from sibling claim. 2026-03-07 Consolidated scaffolding-as-prosthetics evidence from 'every cognitive tool is scaffolding' claim (3→2 condensation)

humans are the minimum viable intelligence for cultural evolution not the pinnacle of cognition

The standard narrative treats human intelligence as exceptional -- the crown of evolution. The minimum sufficient rationality thesis inverts this: we are the dumbest species capable of creating civilization. Our cognitive hardware has remained essentially unchanged for 300,000 years. We hold 4-7 items in working memory, maintain roughly 150 stable social relationships, and make systematically irrational decisions documented by decades of behavioral economics. These are not bugs in an otherwise powerful system -- they are the specifications of a system operating near its minimum viable threshold.

The evidence is in the gap between individual cognition and collective achievement. No individual human can multiply large numbers without external aids, intuitively handle probability, or comprehend global-scale systems. Yet collectively we have built quantum computers and space stations. This paradox resolves when we recognize that cultural evolution, not individual intelligence, does the heavy lifting. We needed just enough -- language for abstract ideas, social learning for faithful transmission, basic causal reasoning, symbolic thought, and sufficient working memory for multi-step processes -- to ignite cultural accumulation. Once lit, that fire burned independently of further biological change.

The pattern is visible in every major cognitive tool: writing exists because we cannot remember enough, mathematics because we cannot calculate, money because we cannot track obligations beyond Dunbar's number, legal systems because we cannot maintain trust at tribal scales, double-blind studies because we fool ourselves, statistical methods because we cannot intuitively handle uncertainty. Every major cognitive tool is a prosthetic for a specific biological limitation, not a luxury enhancement. Civilization advances not by making individuals smarter but by building external systems that compensate for what individuals cannot do.

The strategic implication is that waiting for biological evolution to make us smarter is not an option. Our cognitive hardware is what it is. The only path forward is building external systems -- collective intelligence architectures -- that transcend individual limitations the same way writing transcended individual memory.


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