Spinoza, Evolution, and The Model Trap
Why We Cannot Perceive Reality Directly (Philosophical Questions)
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ナレーター:
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Darla G Foradora
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著者:
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Boris Kriger
We do not see the world as it is. We see only our model of it.
For over two millennia, philosophers have described this condition: Plato's shadows on the cave wall, Kant's veil of phenomena, Spinoza's confused imagination. But why are we trapped behind this perceptual barrier? The answer is not metaphysical mystery, but evolutionary necessity.
Direct perception works beautifully for bacteria and simple organisms-they respond immediately to the world without models, without prediction, without the illusion of a separate self. Yet as organisms grow larger and environments become more complex, two insurmountable constraints emerge: Time-neural signals travel too slowly for large bodies to react directly to fast-moving threats. Noise-raw sensory data is overwhelmingly chaotic; only predictive models can compress it into actionable patterns.
The result is the model trap: any sufficiently complex system must build internal models to survive. Once it does, direct access to reality is lost forever. We perceive not the world, but our brain's controlled hallucination of it.
This architectural necessity explains why consciousness, memory, imagination, and suffering exist-not as separate adaptations, but as inevitable byproducts of predictive compression. It also explains why artificial intelligence, despite being built on silicon, has rapidly converged on the same solution: compressed models that extract structure from noise.
Yet this trap is not a prison. Spinoza, the philosopher who came closest to understanding it, showed the path forward: not escape (which is architecturally impossible), but a transformed relationship with our own minds.
©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger