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Ecological Posthumanism

A close cousin to environmental posthumanism, ecological posthumanism emphasizes the interconnections between all living beings and their environments, viewing humans as one node in vast ecological networks. It draws on ecology's insights about systems, relationships, and emergence to rethink what it means to be human. Ecological posthumanism argues that our identity, our health, our future are inseparable from the health of the ecosystems we inhabit. It's the philosophy of interdependence, of the recognition that no being exists alone—that we are all, always, in relation.
Example: "He thought he was an individual, separate and self-contained. Ecological posthumanism showed him otherwise: he was a walking ecosystem, a node in food webs, a participant in nutrient cycles. His 'self' extended into the soil, the air, the trees. He wasn't less individual; he was more connected. The philosophy made him feel like he belonged to the world, not just in it."
by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
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