Egoic dynamics have shaped human cognition, social structures, and technological systems for tens of thousands of years, yet their historical continuity remains theoretically underdeveloped. This paper reconstructs a genealogy of egoic development from early survival logics to its contemporary algorithmic forms. Drawing on active inference accounts of self maintenance, developmental psychology, socio-cultural theory, and the philosophy of technology, the study argues that ego functions not merely as an individual psychological property but as a systemic engine: a recurrent logic of self-maintenance, control, and boundary-formation that shapes civilizational development across time. The analysis traces how egoic dynamics first emerge as mechanisms of metabolic self-preservation, subsequently acquire psychological coherence, and later crystallize within social and institutional structures, eventually becoming embedded and operationalized within digital infrastructures. By integrating research on mythic consciousness, institutional formation, and algorithmic governance, the paper demonstrates how successive historical phases reproduce and intensify egoic tendencies in new material and symbolic forms. Contemporary AI systems are shown not to constitute a novel threat but rather to automate and amplify long-standing egoic logics already sedimented in human institutions. The study concludes by articulating a normative horizon grounded in Aristotelian virtue ethics and Marxian social critique, clarifying how egoic dynamics might be redirected rather than intensified in emerging technological systems.
Dion Satrio Nugroho (Wed,) studied this question.