Environmental conditions continuously
reshape the algorithmic codes operating beyond the modules of the Subconscious
Component. Every alteration in these default programming structures can
generate new emotions, perceptions, and interpretations of reality within
individuals at any moment. These modifications gradually transmit distorted or
destructive signals into the repository of logical data located within the
Conscious Component, influencing how humans evaluate their surroundings and
make decisions.
Optimal decision-making patterns
emerge when individuals operate through a friendly Network of Cooperative
Instincts. This cooperative structure enables access to an organized and stable
repository of logical data within the Conscious Component, where reasoning,
ethical judgment, and long-term evaluation can function effectively. In
contrast, the aggressive and hostile Network of Competitive Instincts obstructs
this connection. Under the dominance of aggression, fear, and survival-oriented
programming, the decision-making process becomes disconnected from logical
repositories and shifts toward impulsive reactions.
Within chaotic social environments,
humans are often forced to rely on the Network of Competitive Instincts for
survival. The primary mission of the modules and submodules within the
Subconscious Component is immediate protection and survival under any circumstance,
regardless of whether there is sufficient understanding of the physical world
or awareness of long-term consequences. In critical situations, these
instinctive mechanisms prioritize rapid execution over logical reflection and meta-cognition
structure.
The aggressive functional mechanisms
of the Subconscious Component interrupt signal transmission toward the domain
of logical data in the Conscious Component. Instead, they extend execution
codes directly into the brain’s operational framework to produce immediate
action within the physical world. Consequently, the decision-making map becomes
isolated from rational analysis, and the resulting social behaviors often
appear irrational, destructive, or emotionally driven.
Even when humans attempt long-term
planning through the Conscious Component, the decision-making process can
remain irrational if hostile, instinctive networks dominate the Subconscious
Component, and persistent exposure to aggressive social conditions forces both
the Conscious and Subconscious Components into defensive operational states.
Over time, this continuous exposure contaminates the repository of logical data
itself, weakening the quality of judgment, ethical reasoning, and social
awareness.
Ignorance among powerful
decision-makers intensifies this destructive cycle. Many individuals in
positions of authority focus exclusively on economic interests, domination
strategies, and aggressive survival mechanisms within environmental systems.
Some believe that severe suffering, harsh consequences, or social pressure are
necessary to “awaken” humanity along its evolutionary path. They assume that
the physical body alone determines human actions. However, from an algorithmic
perspective, aggressive actions are not produced by the physical body itself,
but by the programming codes operating beyond the Conscious Component.
The Conscious Component contains
preprogrammed structures capable of generating rational and ethical
decision-making patterns independently of destructive social conditions. Nevertheless,
humans are constantly required to make choices within environmental systems.
Once the aggressive Subconscious Component dominates the decision-making
process and executes a survival-oriented response, reversing that decision or
escaping its consequences becomes extremely difficult, especially when access
to optimal logical data has already been blocked.
Humans retain freedom of social
behavior only when balanced and optimal algorithmic codes are maintained within
the Subconscious Component. However, observational analysis suggests that
modern civilization increasingly operates in chaotic, hostile conditions that
reinforce aggression, fear, and instability. Under such circumstances, vicious
algorithms infiltrate both instinctive networks and logical repositories,
degrading collective decision-making processes.
As a result, powerful decision-makers
pursuing hidden interests may consciously or unconsciously construct
self-perpetuating cycles of disorder. Through mechanisms such as social
manipulation, fear propagation, economic dependency, and psychological conditioning,
they sustain anarchistic environments that strengthen aggressive instinctive
responses within populations. In this framework, the concept of the “Instinct
Killer” emerges as a systemic force embedded within platforms of control,
suppressing cooperative instincts while amplifying competitive aggression. This
process weakens social harmony, obstructs ethical evolution, and distances
humanity from rational and conscious development.
A civilized world cannot survive
solely through technological advancement, economic expansion, or institutional
power. Civilization survives only when cooperative instincts, ethical
reasoning, and logical awareness remain stronger than aggression, ignorance,
and destructive algorithmic conditioning. Without restoring balance between the
Conscious and Subconscious Components, humanity risks constructing systems that
accelerate irrationality, normalize hostility, and ultimately undermine the
stability of civilization itself.