The Plastic Hazing Hypothesis (PH)

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Abstract

Microplastic pollution is no longer only an environmental story; it increasingly intersects with human biology. Authoritative assessments emphasize uncertainty about health effects while acknowledging broad exposure (World Health Organization 2019; SAPEA 2019). Recent studies have reported plastic particles in human blood (Leslie et al. 2022) and placenta (Ragusa et al. 2021), intensifying questions about systemic distribution and sensitive endpoints. This paper proposes an expanded, explicitly speculative theory—the Plastic Hazing hypothesis—arguing that micro-/nanoplastic particles may impair cognition not solely through biochemical toxicity, but also by degrading the physical fidelity of the brain’s information-processing microenvironment. We formalize a three-layer model: (1) canonical electrochemical signaling constrained by metabolic budget; (2) mesoscale tissue “information ecology” involving hydration layers, interfaces, and microdomain heterogeneity; and (3) a conjectural fine-scale component in which endogenous electromagnetic/photonic activity and structured intracellular water contribute to precision and integration. In this view, plastic particles act as persistent scatterers, interfacial disruptors, and maintenance burdens that can increase neural noise, reduce plasticity, and bias cognition toward reactive, low-resolution modes. We derive falsifiable predictions, propose experimental and epidemiological study designs, and discuss cultural parallels to traditions describing an “age of darkened mind” (e.g., Kali Yuga motifs) as symbolic anticipations of an Anthropocene cognitive haze. The central claim is practical: whether or not the conjectural layer exists, the hazing framework generates measurable hypotheses about how particulate pollution might erode the conditions of clear thought.

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