I don’t notice your observation as I don’t see things that I don’t know as evil, dark, or black holes.
What you seem to have is a perspective which gives you a personal identity with existence as you experience it and one that appears to work for you well.
Nice!
I don’t see it from that lens, however.
I don’t believe in any gods as existing entities or forces, and further, I wouldn’t care even if such do exist.
It would be akin to a vagabond’s concern for kings.
Regarding our causal perception; I don’t think we’re all that blind.
Each generation of humanity builds on the previous with the findings before them given as inheritance.
By consequence, this creates a perpetually accelerating expansion of awareness and information.
At the rate we are going right now, should nothing catastrophic take place, at 80 I’ll be unto the “current” generation of that time as my great great grandfather is to me now.
And by stating that I don’t think we’re all that blind…we’re just now hitting the forced threshold of globalization.
The last time you had a massive paradigm shift from one socioeconomic infrastructure to another you had the Bronze Age and the Dark Age (two separate occasions of confined small groups evolving into socioeconomic state nations).
If you were of the “old” way, the new social paradigm of state-nations was quite often “your” peoples death.
So far…we’re not rushing off to this level yet.
The EU has taken place without massive war.
Instead, this paradigm shift seems to be more economically impacting rather than physically impacting (borders, city building concept development, etc…).
As such, I would venture to suggest that we, today, have a massive range of lateral causal attention due to a forced requirement of global connection and high sensitivity between networked socioeconomic infrastructures beyond any in recorded history.
In fact, one could argue that the very nature of the merging globalization age in its beginning stages today is the very reason and center of contention between core debates of humanity between isolated solidarity (any construct of society which wedges a strong devotion to an “us” of a small group against a mass range of the world as “them”) vs. globalized utilitarianism (all being seen as needing consideration with respect to choice and impact of choice therein).
Meanwhile, during the Bronze Age, isolated solidarity reigned supreme and was the fuel by which successful civilization was accomplished at all.