This essay presents an ontological and biophysical thesis: in the short post-Neolithic interval—approximately 4% of the historical time of the Homo sapiens code—the number of simultaneous temporary stages of this lineage jumped from a demographic baseline of low order of magnitude (here termed a low-density regime, in the range of 10 million) to about 8.3 billion (February 2026), corresponding to an approximate increase of 82,900% (≈830 times). It is argued that such a leap cannot be interpreted as “evolutionary success” in the sense of regime stability, but rather as a change in boundary condition: the creation of a density prosthesis sustained by active control of the substrate, interruption of cycles, and capture of flows. The essay re-anchors the discussion in the ontology proposed by the Law of the Mandatory Stage of Non-Equilibrium, according to which organisms are not fundamental units; they are necessary transient stages for the maintenance, repair, and retransmission of material codes. It is then demonstrated that the human case is singular: while the vast majority of planetary codes—on orders of magnitude ranging from millions to trillions of lineages—maintain densities within stable regime margins, the human stage becomes a historical anomaly sustained by operational war against “nature”, that is, against the physical substrate of non-equilibrium itself. It is concluded that the central problem is not moral, but physical: a stage that describes itself as the “owner” of the world proceeds to degrade the very conditions that make its continuity possible.
João Carlos Orquiza (Sun,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: