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Nature and the Humankind

Recognizing that the planet, as nature, includes humankind, is perhaps one of the most painful acts of our species, yet also one of the most intelligent, insofar as we acknowledge the need to inhabit a specific space.

In this approach, we observe the clash between rampant production and the desire to settle in territory. Naturally, reflections on what we have experienced, in what we live, and where we’ve lived tend to take an incisive stance regarding the deterioration of human relations with the Earth.

The return to the logic of economization at a time when human action throughout history proves contrary to its most latent needs justifies the liberation of ecology from secondary ideologies, given the urgency of reversing the effects experienced in the Anthropocene.

The time has come to put theory into practice, to rethink and act to increasingly reduce the exploitation of nature, preventing humankind from becoming its own wolf and ensuring the continuation of its species on this planet.