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Naturalistic Apophenia/Pareidolia Theory

The standard, non-critical psychological position. It posits that apophenia (false connections) and pareidolia (false patterns/faces) are evolutionary cognitive biases. They are errors arising from a brain wired for hyper-sensitive pattern detection—a survival mechanism where it's safer to mistakenly see a predator in the bushes (a false positive) than to miss a real one (a fatal false negative). These theories treat the phenomena as fascinating bugs in our neural hardware, often studied to understand perception, psychosis, and the origins of superstition.
Naturalistic Apophenia/Pareidolia Theory Example: Naturalistic Pareidolia Theory explains why people worldwide see faces in electrical outlets or the Martian landscape. The brain's fusiform face area is so primed to detect faces that it fires even with minimal stimulus. This is not a philosophical statement about meaning, but a biological one about a misfiring cognitive module that usually helps us recognize friends and foes.
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