Eidoism proposes that the evolutionary dominance of Homo sapiens was not rooted in superior biology or intelligence alone, but in a neurocognitive mutation: the emergence of the recognition loop. Enabled by advanced frontal lobe development, this loop allowed humans to engage in recursive self-modeling, symbolic communication, and cultural acceleration. While other hominins like Neanderthals and Denisovans shared the same sex drive and survival instincts, they lacked this feedback system and therefore failed to scale socially and culturally. Recognition, not reproduction, became the true axis of evolutionary success.

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The Recognition-Driven War Probability (RDWP) Model redefines how we assess the likelihood of conflict by incorporating a nation’s unconscious collective demand for recognition. Centered on the ratio of military spending to GDP, the model reveals how symbolic identity, domestic pressure, and perceived threats combine to shape strategic behavior. Use cases across diverse nations—from the U.S. to Saudi Arabia—demonstrate how recognition-seeking, more than pure strategic interest, predicts the probability of war in the 21st century.

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