
PLURIVERSAL COSMOTECHNICS
Pluriversal cosmotechnics refers to practices that emerge from the relational worlds of territories, cosmologies, and communities rather than from the universalizing logic of modern Western technology. Drawing on the concept of cosmotechnics developed by Yuk Hui and resonating with the idea of the pluriverse articulated by Arturo Escobar, it proposes that technique is always inseparable from a cosmic order in which nature doesn’t exist. Within this perspective, dreaming, plants, and collective rituals function as technical interfaces through which beings establish relations, share perception, and co-create worlds. Pluriversal cosmotechnics unveil the base of Abya Yala’s artificiality; an extended resonance between worlds grounded in reciprocity and coexistence, where technology becomes a relational practice among beings and territories rather than an instrument of extraction or domination.