A model of the mind proposing that cognition itself is a fractal process. A single thought contains the pattern of a whole line of reasoning. A moment of perception is structured like a whole memory. The way you solve a small, trivial problem (like a typo) is a miniature, faster version of how you solve a major life crisis. The brain is not a computer with different programs, but a single, infinitely complex pattern-generator, creating self-similar structures of thought at every level of consciousness.
Fractalism (Cognitive Sciences) "The way you panicked over that typo in your email—the frantic search for a solution, the blame-shifting, the eventual acceptance—was the exact same pattern as how you handled your last breakup. Your brain doesn't have different 'crisis modules'; it just runs the same fractal pattern on different-sized inputs."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
Get the Fractalism (Cognitive Sciences) mug.The principle that the patterns and structures of the very large (macrocosm) are reflected in the very small (microcosm), and vice versa. It's the scientific echo of "as above, so below." An atom with a nucleus and orbiting electrons structurally resembles a solar system with a star and orbiting planets. The neural networks in your brain resemble the web of galaxies in the universe. This concept suggests that the universe is a self-similar, holographic system where the laws of physics create repeating patterns at every scale, from the quantum foam to the cosmic web. Understanding the microcosm (like quantum mechanics) often gives you the keys to understanding the macrocosm (like the behavior of black holes).
Macrocosm and Microcosm (Science) "Look at this fractal broccoli. Now look at a satellite image of a forest. Now look at a diagram of your lungs. Macrocosm and Microcosm, baby. Nature's just copy-pasting the same 'efficient branching' design at every scale because it's too lazy to come up with something new."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 22, 2026
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