This paper introduces Epic Cognition Theory (ECT), a transdisciplinary framework that posits symbolic cognition—rooted in dreams, poetic expression, and metaphorical simulation—as a core biological substrate for human evolution. Grounded in a rigorous 23-year autoethnographic experiment, ECT challenges traditional psychiatric views by reframing conditions such as autism and schizoid states not as pathologies but as adaptive evolutionary mechanisms. The theory argues that what has historically been interpreted as religious revelation or mental illness is, in fact, a measurable stage of symbolic metamorphosis. By synthesizing findings on mirror neuron function, biophotonic emissions, and epigenetics, the paper bridges the gap between subjective experience and objective biological processes. The paper culminates by exploring a central paradox: a scientific theory of religion and consciousness founded on a single, non-replicable experiment, positioning the work as a unique call to action for a new era of conscious evolution.
Sedat Büyük (Mon,) studied this question.