Posts on the world, worlding

To world is a verb. I found this out writing why we should. Morality/religion/art all those things that should be blurred back together are outcomes of the urge to world, just as we compose our bodies from the sustenance of the terrain, in a landscape of care.

These posts focus on more postive aspects.

  1. the word world
  2. Worldbuilding 101
  3. Worlding on Saturday morning
    • In which I work though my usages of the terms moral urge, through worldbuilding, to worlding
  4. At home in the world
  5. World child
  6. Worlding the love: romance, romantic and roman
  7. Other worlds
  8. Worlding and AI or AGI
  9. other worlding
    1. worlding exhibition in Geelong|djilong July 2024
  10. Series of posts on Worlding and the labour theory of value (but really about narcissists and our value to police them).

The more negative or doctrinal or daogmatic end of the world, which I am more likely to label worldbuilding can be found at Posts on morality/ethics/worldbuilding.

Some posts will be on both lists.

I arrived on worlding after I considered worldbuilding, and realised worlding is a practice we engage in as autonomically as we live our bodies. Worldbuilding is the doubled-down on version of worlding.

So then what is the world, in short it is that 'extended phenotype' of kith and kin. The world is the home of all our homes.