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ABSTRACT Despite over a century of research, the delayed and near-synchronous emergence of symbolic, normative, and future-oriented cognition in Homo sapiens remains unexplained by existing gradualist models. Fossil, archaeological, and genomic records converge on a striking temporal pattern in human origins. Anatomically modern Homo sapiens is present by approximately 315 thousand years ago (≈300 kya in earlier literature), yet sustained symbolic, normative, and purpose-oriented cognitive behaviors do not appear until after roughly 70 thousand years ago. This long, lineage-wide separation between anatomical modernity and cognitive expression is not a local anomaly but a persistent feature of the global human record. Despite decades of research, demographic, ecological, and gene–culture coevolutionary models have struggled to explain both the prolonged absence of cumulative symbolic traditions and their comparatively rapid, integrated emergence, as well as the scarcity of stable transitional intermediates. This preprint advances the Adam Paradox Hypothesis (APH), an architectural model that treats modern human cognition as a state-dependent property of a lineage-wide cognitive system rather than as the outcome of gradual trait accumulation. In this view, anatomical modernity and cognitive expression are structurally decoupled. The cognitive architecture is instantiated early, remains stable in a latent configuration for an extended period, and becomes behaviorally expressed only when internal regulatory coherence crosses a critical activation threshold. Under this architectural formulation, APH accounts for a coherent interpretation of several otherwise puzzling features of the empirical record, including prolonged symbolic latency despite anatomical readiness, long-term constraint within cognition-relevant genomic regions, resistance to disruptive modification through admixture, and the near-global emergence of symbolic, moral, and future-oriented behaviors during the Late Pleistocene. The hypothesis does not claim to resolve the origins of human cognition definitively. Rather, it reframes existing fossil, archaeological, and genomic evidence in architectural terms and derives testable constraints and predictions that can be evaluated alongside competing explanatory models. This preprint is also available via OSF: https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/HAC7 This version (v1.1) incorporates clarifications and minor structural refinements; no substantive claims or empirical predictions were altered.