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"A Genealogy for the End of the World": An essay by Travis Holloway (Keywords: Anthropocene;Climate Change;Counter-history;Justice;Decolonial Thought)
What does it mean to call our era the Anthropocene, an age defined by “humanity” as a geological force? This essay interrogates that name and the universal “we” it assumes. Tracing the entanglements of colonialism, slavery, racial capitalism and environmental extraction, it offers a philosophical counterhistory of the human and its others. Drawing on decolonial thought and philosophical genealogy, it asks whether rethinking our past might open the possibility of a more just e
Travis Holloway
13 min read


"The Unnatural Side of Nature" by Rafael Holmberg (Keywords: Human Nature;German Idealism;Nature-Culture Divide;Climate Change)
This essay explores the unstable boundary between nature and culture, showing how science, philosophy, and politics continually reshape what we call 'natural'. It shows how we continually reinterpret natural phenomena through cultural lenses and how this distortion shapes public responses to the climate crisis, turning a stark natural threat into a cultural dispute. It argues that truly confronting climate change requires rethinking what we mean by nature itself.
Rafael Holmberg
13 min read


"Livability": An Essay by Simona Capisani (Keywords: Climate Change;Justice;Territory; Mobility;Vulnerability)
As climate change shrinks and shifts the human climate niche, millions face heightened risks of displacement, immobility, and loss of well-being. This essay argues for a justice-based framework of climate mobilities grounded in a right to a livable locality. By centering embodied human relationships to place and using the capability approach, it calls for context-sensitive adaptation, shared global obligations, and policies that address inequality, sovereignty, and historical
Simona Capisani
12 min read
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