Definitions by Dumu The Void
Solarpunk Posthumanism
A visionary branch that combines posthumanist thought with the optimistic, aesthetically rich imagination of solarpunk—a movement that envisions futures of renewable energy, ecological harmony, and social justice. Solarpunk posthumanism imagines posthuman futures that are not dystopian (Terminator) or transhumanist (uploading consciousness) but green, communal, and beautiful. It asks: what could humans become if we lived in harmony with nature, powered by the sun, guided by cooperation rather than competition? The answer is solarpunk: a future worth wanting, a posthumanism worth working toward.
Example: "He was tired of dystopian futures—apocalypse after apocalypse, collapse after collapse. Solarpunk posthumanism offered something else: a future where humans had decentered themselves without disappearing, where technology served ecology, where cities were gardens and energy was sunlight. It wasn't naive; it was necessary. If you can't imagine a good future, you can't build one."
Solarpunk Posthumanism by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
Green Posthumanism
An activist-oriented branch of posthumanism that combines ecological awareness with political commitment to environmental justice and sustainability. Green posthumanism argues that decentering the human is not just a philosophical exercise but a practical necessity for planetary survival. It challenges the anthropocentrism that drives climate change, biodiversity loss, and environmental racism. Green posthumanism is posthumanism with a mission: to build a world where humans live within ecological limits, in partnership with other species, rather than at their expense.
Example: "She was an activist before she was a philosopher, fighting for climate justice, protecting ecosystems, defending endangered species. Green posthumanism gave her language for what she already knew: that human supremacy was killing the planet, and that decentering humans was the only way forward. The philosophy didn't change her work; it gave her work meaning."
Green Posthumanism by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
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."
Ecological Posthumanism by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
Environmental Posthumanism
The branch of posthumanist thought that focuses on the relationship between humans and the natural environment, decentering the human within ecological systems. Environmental posthumanism argues that we are not separate from nature but deeply embedded in it—our bodies are ecosystems, our societies depend on ecological processes, our futures are tied to planetary health. It challenges the human/nature binary that has justified environmental destruction, proposing instead that we are part of nature, not its masters. Environmental posthumanism is the philosophy of the Anthropocene—the recognition that humans have become a geological force, for better and (mostly) worse.
Example: "She'd always thought of nature as something 'out there'—parks, wilderness, places to visit. Environmental posthumanism showed her that nature was also in here—the bacteria in her gut, the carbon in her breath, the water in her cells. She wasn't separate from nature; she was nature. The insight changed how she saw everything—including herself."
Environmental Posthumanism by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
Posthumanism
A philosophical movement that questions the centrality of the human in understanding the world, challenging the assumptions of humanism that have dominated Western thought for centuries. Posthumanism argues that "the human" is not a fixed, universal category but a historically and culturally specific construction—one that has been used to exclude and marginalize. It decenters the human, placing us among other species, technologies, and systems rather than above them. Posthumanism explores what comes after humanism: after the assumption that humans are special, after the belief that we are separate from nature, after the fantasy that we control our destiny. It's the philosophy for an age of climate crisis, artificial intelligence, genetic engineering, and ecological collapse—an age where the human is no longer the unquestioned center of anything.
Example: "He used to think humans were special—superior to animals, separate from nature, masters of technology. Then he read posthumanism and saw how those assumptions had justified exploitation, destruction, and domination. He wasn't less human; he was differently human—connected, embedded, dependent. The philosophy didn't make him feel smaller; it made him feel real."
Posthumanism by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
Law of Plausibility and Possible Probability
A framework for evaluating the plausibility and probability of phenomena that seem supernatural, paranormal, or otherwise beyond ordinary explanation—such as spiritual experiences with gods (dreams, visions, visitations), levitation when no one is watching, or other anomalous events. The law proposes that such phenomena should not be dismissed outright but evaluated along multiple dimensions: internal consistency (does the account make sense on its own terms?), external coherence (does it align with known facts?), source reliability (is the witness credible?), and explanatory power (does it explain what needs explaining?). The law also acknowledges that probability is not static—what seems impossible today may become plausible tomorrow as understanding expands. The Law of Plausibility and Possible Probability doesn't prove such phenomena real; it provides a framework for taking them seriously without requiring belief.
Example: "She'd had vivid dreams of a goddess for years—not hallucinations but experiences, real to her, transformative. Skeptics dismissed them as imagination. The Law of Plausibility and Possible Probability offered another view: internally consistent, externally coherent with her life, source reliable (her own experience), explanatory (it explained her peace). Not proof, but plausibility. She didn't need belief; she needed the space to consider that some things might be real even if unproven."
Law of Plausibility and Possible Probability by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
Law of Logical Liquidity
The principle that logic is like the liquid state—fluid, adaptive, taking the shape of whatever container it occupies while maintaining its essential nature as valid inference. Logic flows through different domains—mathematics, law, science, everyday life—taking the shape of each while remaining itself. It's not a solid monument but a flowing river, always moving, always changing, always the same in its essence. The Law of Logical Liquidity recognizes that logic's power lies in its fluidity, its ability to adapt without losing identity.
Example: "He watched logic flow through different cultures—Western emphasis on deduction, Eastern tolerance for paradox, Indigenous integration of narrative. The Law of Logical Liquidity explained: logic takes the shape of its container, but it's still logic. Different forms, same essence—the river of reason flowing through many landscapes."
Law of Logical Liquidity by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026