Meaning as a cognitive substitute for survival instincts: A thought experiment

post by Ovidijus Šimkus (ovidijus-simkus) · 2025-03-18T01:53:52.411Z · LW · GW · 0 comments

Contents

  Common Objections and Responses
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Throughout human evolution, survival was the primary goal. Every action—finding food, seeking shelter, avoiding predators—was driven by primal instincts. However, with the rise of intelligence and technological progress, humans have constructed an environment where survival is no longer the primary daily challenge. Instead, our brains have adapted to fill this cognitive void with something new: the pursuit of meaning.

I propose that the human search for meaning is not an inherent necessity, but rather an evolutionary byproduct—a repurposing of cognitive functions once dedicated to survival. Just as we once needed to hunt for food and avoid predators, our minds now 'hunt' for meaning and purpose, even in a world where survival is largely guaranteed.

🔹 The Evolutionary Transition: How Did This Happen?
At some point in human history, raw survival became less of a daily struggle. The development of agriculture reduced the need for constant food foraging. The formation of stable communities provided protection from external threats. As these primal concerns diminished, the cognitive resources that were once allocated to immediate survival did not simply vanish; they shifted toward other pursuits.

This shift likely played a role in the rise of abstract thinking, culture, religion, and philosophy—systems designed not for physical survival, but for psychological stability. Early humans who found patterns, rituals, and collective purpose may have been more socially cohesive, leading to greater survival of their tribes. Thus, meaning-seeking behavior became reinforced through social evolution rather than sheer biological necessity.

🔹 Modern Evidence: How We Replace Survival with Meaning
This transition is evident in the way modern society has diminished the relevance of many primal instincts. We no longer need to physically fight for territory, yet we seek dominance in social hierarchies. We no longer need to run from predators, yet we create abstract fears—existential dread, societal pressures, and philosophical dilemmas—to replace immediate physical threats. In this way, the quest for meaning might be nothing more than an advanced survival mechanism, adapted for a world that no longer requires daily struggle.

Common Objections and Responses

1️⃣ But meaning gives life purpose, unlike primal survival instincts.
🡆 Purpose is a construct created by the mind, just like fear or ambition. What if it only exists because our brains require a function to fill the void left by diminishing survival challenges?

2️⃣ But animals don’t search for meaning.
🡆 Because they are still driven by primal instincts. Only when those instincts become less relevant does the mind begin constructing abstract alternatives.

3️⃣ If meaning is just an illusion, why do people feel such a deep need for it?
🡆 Because our cognitive architecture demands structure. The same way the human brain sees faces in random patterns (pareidolia), it also constructs meaning in existence to avoid cognitive dissonance. Just as our ancestors needed explanations for natural phenomena, our minds seek meaning even where none objectively exists.

🔹 Final Questions: If meaning is merely an adaptive function rather than an inherent truth, how should we approach it? Should we embrace this illusion or strive to break free from it?

🔹 And if meaning is just an evolutionary stage—where does it lead us next? Do we transition into a new cognitive paradigm, or do we become trapped in a cycle of existential search?

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