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When Many Small Minds Move One Big Thing

Thursday, June 18, 2026

A new idea called vector dissipation of randomness shows how a group with no boss can still move in one direction. It says that when each member of a system picks random moves, the whole group can filter those choices, remember useful patterns from their surroundings, and then act together without a leader.

This idea turns “randomness” into order by letting the environment keep track of good moves and feeding that back to everyone.

Scientists called this way of thinking paraintelligence, meaning the group behaves smartly even though no single creature is thinking.

Proof in a Computer Model

To prove it, researchers built a computer model where ants choose directions at random. Because of simple rules that let the ants notice each other’s choices, they eventually all push a beetle in one consistent direction.

Broad Implications

The model shows that the same rule can work for many systems:

  • Animal herds
  • Computer networks that have no central server
  • Social movements
  • Robot swarms

Instead of one mind telling everyone what to do, the whole group learns from small clues and ends up moving as a single unit.

Takeaway

This shows that order can arise naturally when many simple actors share feedback and information, even if each one acts alone.

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