The Architecture of Error: Why Human Cognition Fails Structurally, Not Morally

I. In 1998, biologist E.O. Wilson diagnosed the human condition: "Paleolithic emotions, medieval institutions, and god-like technology." The formulation endures because it identifies architectural mismatch—perception systems calibrated for immediate threats operating machinery that alters planetary climate, within governance structures designed for pre-industrial scale. This essay examines three structural constraints on human cognition operating below conscious … Continue reading The Architecture of Error: Why Human Cognition Fails Structurally, Not Morally

Zuihitsu, 2026-Q1

These aren’t polished essays or tidy aphorisms. They’re scraps I’ve carried around this month—half-heard thoughts, borrowed lines, sudden recognitions—that refused to be forgotten. Zuihitsu literally means “following the brush,” and while my version is shorter and scrappier than the classical form, the impulse feels the same: to catch what drifts across the mind before it … Continue reading Zuihitsu, 2026-Q1