Imagine you are an ant. All you have seen in your life are only other ants, touching their antennas and moving on. Then, one day, the Ant God, who is benevolent and merciful, lifts you up in the air and shows you the world from there. And, miracle, you see the anthill for the first time. You see the teeming, organized, complex, superorganism which you never suspected to exist but of which have been a single cell for all your life.

That would be quite an experience for an ant and we, humans, might be subjected to something similar: the sudden, unexpected, and amazing perception of the human superorganism – a planetary-scale creature, not unlike a giant anthill, engaged in changing the world.

Physicists enjoy talking about “emergent phenomena,” that is about entities appearing as the result of the interaction of smaller and simpler elements. An anthill is a good example: a single ant is not an anthill and knows nothing about anthills, but the behavior of many ants creates the anthill.

Humans can do something similar, it is an emergent characteristic which appeared only in recent times in the human evolutionary history. Collecting first into bands, then villages, then cities, then states, now humans form a single, giant creature – the superorganism – which is literally devouring the planet to keep itself growing. In a sense, it is like a science fiction novel, but it is real: you can see it at work – one good place to get a feeling of its presence is in Susan Kucera’s movie “Living in the Future’s Past.”

The concept of a human superorganism is not new – its origins may go back to the work of Gustave Le Bon, “The Psychology of the Crowds” (1895). The idea of a single, worldwide human anthill is relatively recent, but it is clearly appearing in the human memesphere.

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