A branch that grounds posthumanist thought in scientific understanding—evolutionary biology, cognitive science, complexity theory, ecology. Scientific posthumanism argues that science itself has been decentering the human for centuries: Copernicus moved us from the center of the universe, Darwin placed us among the animals, Freud showed we're not masters in our own house. Contemporary science continues the trajectory: we're made of stardust, we're ecosystems, we're nodes in networks. Scientific posthumanism draws on these insights to build a posthumanism that is empirically grounded, not just philosophically speculative.
Example: "She was skeptical of philosophy—too abstract, too speculative. But scientific posthumanism spoke her language: evolution showed we're not special, ecology showed we're connected, neuroscience showed we're not unified. The science was already posthumanist; the philosophy just made it explicit. She didn't need to believe; she needed to see what science was already showing."
by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
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