Modern society maintains a striking and internally inconsistent double standard: extraordinary, scientifically unexplained excellence in art, athletics, and physiology is celebrated as "more than real" — as a glimpse of the divine — while equivalent excellence in the spiritual/PSI domain is dismissed as impossible, delusional, or fraudulent. We argue that this inconsistency reveals something important: humans are universally wired to recognize and seek transcendence, and they do so constantly even in ostensibly "unspiritual" contexts. The awe experienced watching a great singer, the reverence for Wim Hof's physiological feats, or the stunned silence before a virtuoso dancer are all instances of the same transcendent recognition that religious traditions identify as encounter with the divine. The double standard is not a coherent epistemological position — it is a culturally specific suppression of spiritual recognition in one domain while freely permitting it in adjacent domains. TI Sigma offers what the modern world has failed to provide: an accurate, integrated accounting of meaning — one that makes the transcendence humans already experience legible as spiritual reality.
Brandon Charles Emerick (Tue,) studied this question.