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    TADEASplanetarita - 'making life planetary'
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    2018 A planetary turn for the social sciences? - Bronislaw Szerszynski
    https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9780429470097-32/planetary-turn-social-sciences-bronislaw-szerszynski
    https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/196590254.pdf

    there were also hints of another potential transformation of the social sciences, one which I want to call the planetary turn. While sharing some themes with the global turn, this nascent turn is strikingly different in its approach and implications. Above all, whereas the global turn was mainly about saying that the social sciences needed to respond to the growing interconnectedness of social processes across the surface of the planet, the planetary turn involves the recognition that the bounding of the social was always already problematic, and on another, more comprehensive front: that between human society as a semiotic, meaningful phenomenon on the one hand and the physical processes of the Earth on the other. It thus involves the rejection of what had been a key assumption of sociology since its foundation, human exemptionalism, an assumption which had already been problematized in the 1970s by the subdiscipline of environmental sociology

    ...

    the foundational task of any planetary turn must be the interdisciplinary task ofinvestigating the planet as a category of being in its own right, and the ways in which this conditions social existence in fundamental ways. This involves moving beyond the way that the figure of ‘the planet’ has figured in globalisation discourses, where the focus has been on a narrow range of characteristics of the Earth such as unity, boundedness, fragility and interconnectedness. Instead, we need a more complex account of ‘planetary being’ which is at once more general and more tightly specified. John’s use of complexity, emergence and non-Newtonian time in books from Sociology Beyond Societies (2000) onwards was a great starting point, but we need to draw in more detail from the Earth sciences.

    ...

    a planetary social science would be volumetric, concerned with relations not just on the surface of the Earth but also within and across all the different entangled volumes of the planet from its core out to its near space environment. As social scientists are increasingly arguing, we need to develop a 3D imaginary for the social sciences. John’s work gave some pointers for how to do this, by going up into the atmosphere in his book with Cwerner and Kesselring on Aeromobilities (2009) and down into geological strata in Societies Beyond Oil. But this volumetric approach needs to be developed more systematically, through a deeper engagement with the significance of the Earth’s stratification into different layers and compartments – core, mantle, crust, biosphere, hydrosphere, atmosphere, magnetosphere – with different properties and stabilised on different timescales. A planetary turn would also be concerned with the distinctive topological relations and thereby modes of existence and relatedness that are made possible by this stratification. Strata are often in asymmetrical relations of dependency with each other, and the surfaces and boundariesbetween different strata and compartments occasion radically different kinds of phenomena. The sub-aerial surface that was left largely reified and unproblematised in sociology’s global turn starts to look different and far more interesting when we first zoom out to investigate the diverse forms of complex order that can be generated in and between other zones of the extended body of the Earth, and only then zoom back in to the ‘critical zone’ or ‘boundary layer’ of mixing between earth and sky that we ourselves inhabit

    ...

    a planetary social science would also have to engage with the interplanetary. One aspect of this concerns interplanetary mobilities – the study of the multiple ways in which the stories of individual planets can become intertwined through the exchange of entities and materials of different kinds. Here the critical social sciences can help avoid the unreflective projection of ‘globalisation’ narratives of imperialism and neoliberalism onto an extra-terrestrial canvas. But another aspect of the interplanetary, at least as important, is the comparative. The deepening understanding of our own solar system and the continuing discovery of diverse exoplanets orbiting other stars can help us to construct a far more expansive theoretical ‘phase space’ for planetary development, one that can accommodate diverse possible developmental trajectories of planets. For the social sciences this is an opportunity to counter the dominant geocentric ‘observer bias’ that takes the specific story of the Earth to be the template for any planet that might develop complex organised matter. Drawing on empirical astronomy, but also the more speculative practices of astrobiology and science fiction, a planetary social science can explore how the complex forms of matter, meaning and motion that we associate with society might have emerged through very different developmental processes and take profoundly different forms

    ...

    In What is the future? (2016), John Urry rejected two common approaches to the future: one that focuses on individual rationality and agency, and another that sees the future as more or less determined by fixed structures. Instead, he insisted on the need to regard social futures as the product of self-organising complex adaptive systems, which pass through phase transitions and thereby behave in non-linear ways. This insight applies a fortiori to planetary futures. The Earth regarded in the way I have sketched above – as planet, as volumetric, as differential and as geohistorical – is one whose future cannot be known in advance. However, at the same time, these dimensions of the planetary turn can help us to discern the possibilities latent within our own time, and perhaps better steer towards more desirable futures for our own, precious home planet.
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    Multi-Planetary Worlds: Mobilities of the Space Age — the UWA Profiles and Research Repository
    https://research-repository.uwa.edu.au/en/publications/multi-planetary-worlds-mobilities-of-the-space-age

    As advances in techno-science propel a range of objects and ideas, data and images and affects and capital beyond the globe, their proliferation progressively entangles human societies with their planetary outside. The mobilities of the space age accelerate and magnify the prospective reach of our futures in the making. Opening up opportunities for multi-planetary projections of the species, they steadily protract the horizon of our common world. This chapter captures an array of mobilities enlivening our multi-planetary arena, exploring the ways in which their material and social effects condition the unfolding of our shared futures on and off the Earth.

    Library Genesis: Carlos López Galviz (editor), Emily Spiers (editor) - Routledge Handbook of Social Futures
    http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=6B4096AB8157039F44501DCEF2BBDE41
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    2022 The Moving Walkway is Ending: A Speculative Essay on Climate-Driven Species Mobility and Planetary Politics
    https://sciendo.com/article/10.21307/borderlands-2022-009

    The article examines this less considered element of the current and future mobile planet, in search of framings that can better help us grapple with the transformations underway. It first presents some general global projections of species mobilities and presents some of the key issues raised around intersection of human and nonhuman mobility. It then turns to two elemental forces—fire and ice—whose power is increasingly visible in contemporary planetary politics. Both elements call for a consideration of deeper time horizons, alongside the immediate emergencies that these forces also bring about. The final section turns to think about the ethics, time scales, and differential politics of a fully mobile planet—one that is mobile from geological forces to earthly elements, from nonhuman species to human lives and cultures, drawing on recent work on earth mobility and speculative kinetic ethics.
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    2020 Transplanetary Ecologies: A New Chapter in Social Studies of Outer Space?
    https://www.easst.net/article/transplanetary-ecologies-a-new-chapter-in-social-studies-of-outer-space/

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    2021 Exchanging Fire: A Planetary History of the Explosion
    https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/163636/1/Exchanging_Fire_.pdf

    The invention of near-instantaneous combustion – the fiery explosion – is an event in both in planetary and human history. While the concoction of a volatile mix of carbon, sulfur and nitrates by alchemists in 9th century China paved the way for firearms and gunpowder empires, ultra-highspeed deflagration is also arguably the first entirely new form of combustion on Earth since fire emerged in the Silurian Period some 410 million years ago. What does it mean, I ask, that the explosion is at once instrumental in the global rise of Western powers and a planetary event that exceeds the practices, strategies and imaginaries that organize its deployment? In this chapter I explore two related paradoxes of explosive firepower. The first is that the relatively rapid technological transfer of the firearm from China to Europe is at once a source of profound trauma for the ‘modernizing’ European subject and a key component in the triumphalist narrative of Western global expansion. The second is that the application of explosives in extractive industries both plays an important role in advancing the understanding of the geological strata – and hence the deep history of the Earth, and is of pivotal importance in transforming Earth systems and rock fabrics to such an extent that the very legibility of the Earth and is compromised. Extending the idea of planetary social thought (Clark and Szerszynski 2021), the chapter brings these paradoxes together as a way to reimagine Western colonization as a pyrogeographical process: at once a variation played on firepower of the Earth and an instrument of a specific world-shaping structural violence.
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    2022 Planetary ethnography: A primer
    https://ruj.uj.edu.pl/xmlui/bitstream/handle/item/292651/szolucha_et-al_planetary_ethnography_2022.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

    Many people and communities have engaged and encountered the planetary long before Sputnik 1 reached Earth orbitto become the first human-made object to cross the Kármán line. For centuries, looking up at the sky has served as an important way to navigate people’s location, both on Earth (Kursh and Kreps 1974)and within the Universe(Hamacher and Banks 2019). Indigenous communities recount their experience of centuries of encounters in space (Bawaka Country et al. 2020) and their cosmic connections to space (Young 1987). And extra-terrestrial planetary rendezvous on Earth are reportedby people and communities across the globe (Battaglia 2006; Saethre 2007).

    In planetary ethnography, we want to trace people’s engagements with outer space that challenge dominant conceptions within scientificdiscourses. We hope that this approach will help usbring out the tensions, ambiguities and pluralities of the planetary. As Spivak puts it, “planet-thought”needs to include a historical reckoning where we continuously educate ourselves and embrace interrogations into the meanings of “outer”and “inner space” (Spivak 2015).
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    2021 Planetary Cities: Fluid Rock Foundations of Civilization
    https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/02632764211030986

    Whereas recent framings of planetary urbanization stress the planet-scaled impacts of contemporary urban processes, we might also conceive of cities as being constitutively ‘planetary’ from their very outset. This article looks at two ways in which the earliest urban centres or ‘civilizations’ on the floodplains of the Fertile Crescent harnessed the deep, geological forces of the Earth. The first is the tapping and channelling of sedimentary processes, central to what Wittfogel referred to as hydraulic civilizations (1963). The second is the use of high-heat technologies to smelt and forge metals, which can be construed as a capture of igneous processes [ igneous civilizations ? ]. What both sets of practices have in common is that they involve skilled intervention in fluid-solid phase transitions between solid rock and flowing particulate matter. Viewing cities as constitutively geological or planetary in this way can help us reimagine the challenges posed to urban spaces by looming transformations in Earth systems.

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    2020 Planetary Social Thought: The Anthropocene Challenge to the Social Sciences - Nigel Clark, Bronislaw Szerszynski
    http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=922A7CC8A1F3100A48597185F167E623

    The Anthropocene has emerged as perhaps the scientific concept of the new millennium. Going further than earlier conceptions of the human–environment relationship, Anthropocene science proposes that human activity is tipping the whole Earth system into a new state, with unpredictable consequences. Social life has become a central ingredient in the dynamics of the planet itself.

    How should the social sciences respond to the opportunities and challenges posed by this development? In this innovative book, Clark and Szerszynski argue that social thinkers need to revise their own presuppositions about the social: to understand it as the product of a dynamic planet, self-organizing over deep time. They outline ‘planetary social thought’: a transdisciplinary way of thinking social life with and through the Earth. Using a range of case studies, they show how familiar social processes can be radically recast when looked at through a planetary lens, revealing how the world-transforming powers of human social life have always depended on the forging of relations with the inhuman potentialities of our home planet.

    Introduction: What Planet Are You On?
    1 Earth at the Threshold
    2 Who Speaks through the Earth?
    3 Planetary Social Life in the Making
    4 What is Planetary Social Thought?
    5 Inhuman Modernity, Earthly Violence
    6 Terra Mobilis
    7 Grounding Colonialism, Decolonizing Earth
    8 Earthly Multitudes and Planetary Futures: Ten Questions
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    Planetary Project - The Official Website
    http://planetaryproject.com/

    Planetary Project Publications and Ideology
    http://planetaryproject.com/planet_project/public/
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    2019 The Origins of Planetary Ethics in the Philosophy of Russian Cosmism
    https://www.amazon.com/Origins-Planetary-Philosophy-Russian-Cosmism/dp/154349420X









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    vernadsky jako myslitel planetarity

    2014 150 Years of Vernadsky: The Noösphere
    https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/1500605395/ref=pd_aw_sim_14_1?ie=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=VC2RKYA4A6T0E2HAJ5FD&dpPl=1&dpID=51H-AfwHj0L

    2014 150 Years of Vernadsky: The Biosphere
    https://www.amazon.com/150-Years-Vernadsky-Biosphere-1/dp/150060514X

    2015 The Study of Life and the New Physics
    https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/1514637103/ref=pd_aw_sim_14_2?ie=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=EK0XTZRCSF9V20TEVFE0&dpPl=1&dpID=31Y9Ug%2BPvML

    The author was clearly one of the early pioneers along the path to a new way of perceiving reality. Clearly not the only one, he belonged to the first first straggling nodes of the emerging global network that would slowly set in motion the dynamics that would generate a perception of the cosmos as a stochastic process that has neither beginning nor end and the human species as being amongst a myriad perceptual mechanisms generated by this process in order to perceive the potential pathways to its own becoming, being and non being, and which at the time included such elements as Fitjof Capra, Arne Naess, James Lovelock, Lynn Margulis, Humberto Maturana, Francisco Varela and a few others.

    The history of the emergence of this unitive or non dual perception of the cosmos is a long one that goes back to the beginning of the emergence of homo sapiens, that has as yet to be told and when it finally is set down in writing Vernadsky's contribution will surely find acknowledgement therein. While the emergence of such a history may not be far away the works of Vernadsky will have to await its coming in order to take its due recognition as an important step in the evolution of human perceptual capacity.

    The network of those with such perceptual capacities (sometimes wrongly called systems thinkers) is growing and the collective perceptions that it has begun to generate have begun to surpass anything that the perception of any single human individual is able to generate. The pathway to the recognition of this network and its engagement of earthprocesses has been laid by the concept of the United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network now actively functioning with global scope. Vernadsky may never have realized that his perceptions of the cosmos were the precursors of a new world that would lead to a new lease of life for the human species and an opportunity for the transformation of its global civilization into a sustainable one and for the facilitation of lifes conscious evolution through and beyond human being and its spread throughout the cosmos
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    paliativni proces

    The Age of Extinction Is Here — Some of Us Just Don’t Know It Yet | by umair haque | Eudaimonia and Co
    https://eand.co/the-age-of-extinction-is-here-some-of-us-just-dont-know-it-yet-7001f5e0c79a

    We’re Not Going to Make it to 2050 | by umair haque | Jul, 2022 | Eudaimonia and Co
    https://eand.co/were-not-going-to-make-it-to-2050-5398cf97b805

    What Do You Call the Feeling of a Dying Planet? | by umair haque | May, 2022 | Eudaimonia and Co
    https://eand.co/what-do-you-call-the-feeling-of-a-dying-planet-18d281891b76
    TADEAS
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    paliativne-regenerativni proces

    Screenshot-20220722-151927-Facebook
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    paliativni proces

    THINKING CATASTROPHIC THOUGHTS: A TRAUMATIZED SENSIBILITY ON A HOTTER PLANET | SpringerLink
    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1057/s11231-022-09340-3

    While catastrophizing has traditionally been pathologized within psychoanalytic traditions, in this paper I suggest that cataclysmic realities of climate change call upon all of us to cultivate catastrophic thinking. Our new climatic normal demands of us not only new concepts and language, but also a new sort of thinking, building on Wilfred Bion’s ideas that to think is to use our mind’s capacity to be in touch with internal and external realities. I suggest that sometimes people are able to learn from their experiences of trauma in ways that disrupt the culturally dominant anenvironmental orientation, that is, an orientation that brackets out the more-than-human environment. Instead, they develop a capacity to think catastrophically about and to be permeable to the more-than-human environment. What I call their “traumatized sensibility” can offer guidance as we come to co-exist with and respond more consciously to our hotter planet
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    Anthropology for the Ecozoic | L4Ecozoic
    https://www.l4ecozoic.org/anthropology-for-the-ecozoic
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    2014 Satellite Planetarity and the Ends of the Earth
    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/275445137_Satellite_Planetarity_and_the_Ends_of_the_Earth

    This essay examines the militarization of extraterrestrial and extraterritorial spaces such as the high seas, outer space, and Antarctica since the onset of the Cold War. While environmental studies has generally focused on national topographies, this essay instead imagines the earth through visual tropes of the extraterrestrial. Mapping these “outer spaces”—terrae incognitae—within and outside the earth has been key to our modern understanding of the planet and to visualizing the global environment, including climate change. Turning to the militarization of outer space and Antarctica, the essay examines satellite vision produced by the Cold War systems of surveillance, particularly as inscribed by New Zealand author James George. The conclusion of the essay turns to ways these technologies are constitutive of visions of the global in the Anthropocene.
    ALWA
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    YEETKA: Jsou. Omlouvám se. Já myslel, že je to odpařováním, ale asi to bude jak říkáš. :)
    YEETKA
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    ALWA: oceánská flora nejsou rostliny? *)
    ALWA
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    YEETKA: vic kysliku ney flora vuprodukuji oceany
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    (PDF) Design for Human and Planetary Health - A Holistic/Integral Approach to Compexity and Sustainability | Daniel Christian Wahl, PhD - Academia.edu
    https://www.academia.edu/8703162/Design_for_Human_and_Planetary_Health_A_Holistic_Integral_Approach_to_Compexity_and_Sustainability
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