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Spiritual Posthumanism

A branch that integrates posthumanist thought with spiritual and contemplative traditions, exploring what it means to be human in relation to the more-than-human world—ancestors, spirits, the divine, the cosmos. Spiritual posthumanism challenges the materialist assumptions of much posthumanist thought, arguing that decentering the human might open us to dimensions of reality beyond the physical. It draws on Indigenous traditions, Eastern philosophy, mysticism, and contemporary consciousness studies to imagine posthuman futures that include spirit, not just matter.
Example: "He was drawn to posthumanism's critique of human supremacy but found most of it materialist, reductionist, cold. Spiritual posthumanism offered another path: decentering the human could mean opening to spirit, not closing to it. His ancestors, his gods, his dreams—all part of a larger whole that included but exceeded the human. He wasn't less; he was more."
by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
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Esoteric Posthumanism

A branch that draws on esoteric and occult traditions—Hermeticism, Kabbalah, alchemy, Thelema—to imagine posthuman futures. Esoteric posthumanism argues that the "human" of humanism is a recent, limited construct, and that older traditions knew we were more than this—connected to stars, spirits, and hidden dimensions. It explores practices of transformation—ritual, magic, meditation—that might help us become something other than the limited humans of modernity. Esoteric posthumanism is posthumanism with a mystical twist, for those who suspect that the future of humanity might involve the gods as much as the genes.
Example: "She found mainstream posthumanism too clinical—all cyborgs and algorithms, no soul. Esoteric posthumanism spoke to her differently: the alchemists had sought transformation, the mystics had sought union, the magicians had sought power beyond the human. These weren't relics; they were resources. The posthuman future might look less like a lab and more like a temple."
by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
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Religious Posthumanism

A branch that engages with religious traditions—Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism—to explore posthuman possibilities. Religious posthumanism argues that religions have always been posthumanist in some ways: they posit souls that transcend the body, gods that exceed the human, afterlives that continue beyond death. The challenge is to rethink these traditions without the human supremacy that has often accompanied them—to imagine religious posthumanisms that are ecological, inclusive, and humble rather than dominating and exclusive.
Example: "He was raised religious but left when he couldn't accept human supremacy—the idea that humans were special, favored, above all else. Religious posthumanism offered a return: what if his tradition's teachings about souls and gods could be read as decentering the human, not elevating it? He could be religious again, differently—not as a human above, but as a human among."
by Dumu The Void February 19, 2026
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Scientific Posthumanism

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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Valid Postmodernism

The recognition that postmodernism, often dismissed as nihilistic or relativistic, contains valid insights about the nature of truth, power, and reality that are essential for navigating the contemporary world. Valid Postmodernism accepts the core postmodern critiques—that truth is constructed, that power shapes knowledge, that grand narratives are suspect—without collapsing into the conclusion that nothing is true or everything is permitted. It uses postmodern tools to clear away false certainties, expose hidden power, and open space for new possibilities, while retaining the ability to make judgments, take stands, and fight for what matters. Valid Postmodernism is postmodernism with a spine, critique with commitment, deconstruction with construction.
Example: "He'd dismissed postmodernism as nonsense, nihilism, the end of everything. Valid Postmodernism showed him otherwise: the tools of deconstruction could expose power, the critique of grand narratives could free him from dogma, the recognition that truth is constructed could make him humble. He didn't have to accept everything; he just had to question everything—including his own certainties."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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Scientific Postmodernism

A much-misunderstood approach that applies postmodern critique to scientific practice: questioning grand narratives of inevitable progress, exposing the power relations embedded in knowledge production, deconstructing the binary oppositions that structure scientific thought (nature/culture, objective/subjective, fact/value), and attending to the marginalized voices excluded from scientific conversation. Scientific Postmodernism doesn't deny that science produces knowledge—it denies that this knowledge comes from nowhere, serves everyone equally, or stands outside history. It's science forced to look at its own reflection, and it makes some scientists very uncomfortable.
"You think science is pure truth-seeking? Scientific Postmodernism asks: who funded the research? Whose interests does it serve? Who wasn't in the room when methods were chosen? Who benefits from this 'neutral' finding? Not because science is bad—because pretending it's innocent is dangerous."
by Abzugal February 23, 2026
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The application of postmodern critique to knowledge itself: questioning grand narratives of inevitable epistemic progress, exposing the power relations embedded in knowledge claims, deconstructing the binary oppositions that structure Western epistemology (reason/emotion, objective/subjective, fact/value), and attending to marginalized ways of knowing excluded from the canon. Epistemological Postmodernism doesn't deny that knowledge is possible—it denies that any knowledge comes from nowhere, serves everyone equally, or stands outside history. It's epistemology forced to look at its own reflection.
"You think Western science is just universal truth? Epistemological Postmodernism asks: whose truth? Built on whose labor? Excluding whose knowledge? Serving whose interests? Not because science is wrong—because pretending it's innocent of power is how power hides. Check your epistemological privilege."
by Abzugal February 23, 2026
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