It’s Tuesday, January 13th, 2026 (CE or AD) as I write this. I’m aware of no superstition in which Tuesday the 13th is either particularly unlucky or particularly lucky. It’s just a day, even though it’s the 13th. There are 13ths in every month, after all, though 31sts are another matter (it’s another prime number and is also a palindrome, if you will, of the 13th).
I do somewhat enjoy the fact that the numbers in the (American) expression of the date are: 01-13 and 2026. Taking non-zero digits only of the month and century only would give us a situation in which the digits of the second half‒2, 2, and 6‒are twice the digits of the first half‒1, 1, and 3.
That’s quite tortured, I know, as far as finding patterns in numbers goes. At least I’m just doing this for fun, because I enjoy such patterns. I don’t see any real meaning in them other than “numbers are cool”. But there are people who believe there is a deeper meaning in such number patterns, like some secret cypher left there by the gods. It’s rather silly. But it is of such mistaken attribution to purpose of mere random patterns that religions (and constellations) are made. More’s the pity.
I have a bit of sympathy for our distant ancestors who first were left to make “meanings” of the various patterns and events they discerned among the various forces in the world with their big, advanced brains but couldn’t yet explain well. So, they made up stories, and those stories involved the forces of nature being enacted and designed by “people” or sometimes just one “person”. People were what they knew best.
It’s understandable. It’s also just wrong (certainly as far as I can tell), as are most initial hypotheses. Unfortunately, other people respond to those who speak with confidence, whether that confidence is warranted or not*. And so, they believe. And like viruses (which are just a kind of self-replicating data, after all) the superstitious ideas are able to use the machinery of human minds to reproduce themselves‒not because they want to reproduce themselves, but because the ones that tend to reproduce themselves tend to multiply, and even to mutate to greater reproduction and persistence and so on.
In case it’s not clear, I am not speaking metaphorically here. This appears to be the way that religions and other ideologies occur and propagate. There are, of course, many details at the level of individuals and why they are prone to absorb and then to pass these memeplexes on, either “horizontally” or “vertically” or both.
But there are similar such details in how specific viruses spread. Does COVID latch onto this or that cell surface protein or glycopeptide? Does it reproduce in this particular cell type better or another one? Does it lead to sneezing or coughing in its host, thus making it airborne, or does it induce vomiting and/or diarrhea, making it more food or water borne, or does it reproduce in the organs of reproduction, leading it to be mainly sexually transmitted? The details matter in dealing with specific viruses, but the pattern of origin and spread and mutation is general.
From these patterns, we can understand (for instance) why rapidly and aggressively lethal viruses tend to be replaced by more sublethal ones: if your host dies too quickly, you don’t get as many chances to spread. This requires no intentionality on the part of the virus. It requires only the logic of replication, in which successful replicators tend to spread more than less successful ones and so come to dominate.
The competition requires no consciousness. Similarly, religion does not require the existence of any actual deity to be able to cause people to believe in one. And a religion’s prevalence doesn’t imply that it is correct, only that it is contagious and/or persistent but not instantly lethal.
We see cases of new and/or mutated mind viruses (religions in this case) that are indeed too virulent and so fail to become endemic, Think of Jonestown, or the Branch Davidians, or Heaven’s Gate (and possibly Trumpism, but we shall see).
It’s possible for a virus that has existed in a body unnoticed or with minimal symptoms and signs for years or decades to respond to changes in the circumstances of its body by becoming more virulent again‒think of shingles (Zoster) the recrudescence of Chicken Pox (Varicella), or the horrible flare-ups (flares-up?) of some chronic hepatitides.
Similarly, just because the human race has endured so far with reasonable success despite being infected with various competing and mutually contradictory memeplexes does not mean it will continue to do so. Certain of these mind virus variants have the clear potential to lead to globally life-threatening symptoms, and more than one shows signs of doing so.
But why would a virus, whether of the mind or of the body, do things that would lead to the destruction of the host it inhabits, and thereby itself? That question misses the point***. Viral evolution (like all such evolution) has no capacity to plan for the future. It may seem that viruses mean to spread themselves, but that’s only because the ones that don’t tend, by their nature, to spread themselves don’t become prevalent; they don’t spread.
On the other hand, those that have, by chance, comparative advantage in terms of replication tend to replicate more and thus become more prevalent. And if they mutate (which they will, see my point yesterday about how copying is never perfect) then those mutant forms that are more prone to replicate will replicate more, and of course, those mutants that have decreased the tendency to replicate or that destroy the host do not persist. There’s no need for purpose; causality is enough.
This post is getting a little long for today, so I’ll draw it to a close. I could say more on this subject and how the concept of the non-random survival of randomly varying replicators explains far more than just the literal evolution of life, but can provide insight into so much more, so many things. Darwin was a mightier mind than he could ever know, or at least he came upon an idea that is more powerful than nearly any other that science has found.
Think on that, and be amazed.
*We’re living through some consequences of humans’ stupid tendency to trust people who convey confidence and certainty, even while telling patent lies. Maybe we should hope for global thermonuclear war. If humans survive it, maybe they would finally learn from that dreadful lesson**.
**But I doubt it.
***So why did I raise it? For rhetorical purposes, though I have real discomfort with and distrust of rhetoric, it being one of the things that can help virulent mind viruses spread.

Wouldn’t it be great if the truth replicated like a virus and overwhelmed all the superstitious and just plain wrong memes. But for some reason it doesn’t.
That would be nice. I guess it’s just that truth requires more than mere “catchiness” but also needs intellectual honesty and rigor and effort. It’s easier (in the short run only) to believe what feels good or just what goes along with the mind viruses to which we’ve been exposed. I think truth will “win” in the end, even if only by ensuring the destruction of modes of thought that are non-true (even those who don’t believe in stellar evolution will burn as the sun gets hotter and then becomes a red giant). Alas, that destruction is unlikely to be confined solely to those who do not appreciate truth.
Right, it seems the “mind viruses” that succeed and propagate wildly are the ones that happen to flatter our egos (e.g. “Earth is at the center of the universe!” “Humans are the crown of creation, specially created by a god who looks just like us!” ). But the truth can be brutal or at least indifferent to an inflated ego, so it is often overlooked and so doesn’t propagate so widely.
Yeah, more like a seed that needs to be cultivated and cared for in the right soil than a mere virus (or memeplex).