Cognitive Scientific Theory of Mass Dissociation of Late-Stage Capitalism
A framework applying cognitive science at population scale to understand mass dissociation under late-stage capitalism. The cognitive scientific theory investigates how cognitive mechanisms scale up through populations: how attention is collectively shaped by media environments; how memory is socially constructed through shared narratives; how belief formation is influenced by network effects; how cognitive biases are amplified through social dynamics. It uses tools from cognitive psychology, neuroscience, and cognitive anthropology to study how mass dissociation operates—how populations collectively manage the cognitive load of systemic awareness, how shared attention patterns enable mass denial, how distributed cognition can produce collective blind spots. This approach reveals that mass dissociation under late-stage capitalism is not just a social phenomenon but a cognitive one—rooted in how human minds work, amplified by social and technological systems, and shaped by the cognitive demands of the economic order.
Example: "His cognitive scientific theory of mass dissociation of late-stage capitalism used network analysis to show how climate denial spreads through social media—not as deliberate misinformation alone, but through cognitive mechanisms of confirmation bias and social trust that the platform architecture exploits. The dissociation is cognitive, social, and technological all at once."
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