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Metabolical Intelligence

The measurable capacity of a metabolic system (from a cell to an ecosystem) to adaptively manage energy and material resources to ensure survival and growth. It's the "smarts" of a system in maintaining homeostasis, exploiting opportunities, and innovating under constraint. A plant strategically growing roots toward water and nutrients is displaying metabolical intelligence—a slow, chemical wisdom.
Example: "The fungal network in the forest floor displays metabolical intelligence. It trades nutrients with tree roots, prioritizes connections to stressed plants, and can even transfer warning signals. It's a vast, underground internet where the currency is sugar and nitrogen, and the protocols are written in biochemistry."
by Dumu The Void January 30, 2026
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Swarm Intelligence

The collective, emergent problem-solving ability that arises from the decentralized, self-organized cooperation of many simple agents, whether they're insects, robots, or software bots. No single entity is in charge or has the big picture; intelligence emerges from the bottom-up through local interactions and simple rules (like "follow the one in front," "avoid crowding," "move toward the target"). The swarm as a whole exhibits complex, adaptive behaviors—finding optimal paths, allocating tasks, or forming structures—that any individual member is too dumb to comprehend. It's democracy as a superorganism.
*Example: A colony of army ants building a living bridge with their bodies to cross a gap, or a flock of starlings (a murmuration) swirling in mesmerizing patterns to evade a predator, are natural Swarm Intelligence. In tech, a fleet of 100 delivery drones coordinating in real-time to avoid collisions and optimize package routes across a city, without a central air traffic controller, is engineered swarm intelligence.*
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 3, 2026
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A provocative redefinition of intelligence as the optimized capacity to confirm one's own predictive models. In this view, an intelligent agent isn't one that passively absorbs truth, but one that actively structures its perception, attention, and action to reinforce its internal model of reality. The smarter the agent, the more efficiently it finds evidence for its hypotheses and filters out dissonant data. What we call "stupidity" is often just poor confirmation strategy—inefficiently gathering disconfirming evidence that undermines one's own goals. This turns confirmation bias from a cognitive flaw into the very engine of adaptive behavior.
Confirmation Bias Intelligence Example: A chess grandmaster doesn't consider all possible moves; their intelligence instantly confirms the promising few, ignoring thousands of losing branches. This is confirmation bias as cognitive efficiency. A conspiracy theorist, equally intelligent, confirms his elaborate model by selectively attending to ambiguous data. Both are performing the same core operation: using prior knowledge to rapidly validate a useful model of the world. Intelligence is the speed and accuracy of self-confirmation.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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