"Space Wombism: The Next Billion Years of Human Shelter" reveals how spacecraft function as technological wombs—protective environments that don't just sustain life but fundamentally transform human consciousness, culture, and society. As humanity becomes multiplanetary, we're creating the first artificial environments that completely mediate human existence, where every breath, drop of water, and social interaction occurs within technological systems.
Drawing from the author's space architecture expertise, this book examines how space habitats reshape identity, social structures, and our understanding of what it means to be human beyond Earth. The work explores the psychology of confinement, the emergence of space-specific cultures, and the philosophical implications of absolute technological dependence.
With a foreword by Frank White (author of "The Overview Effect"), the book bridges space technology with cultural theory, revealing how the design of space habitats will shape humanity's cosmic evolution. As climate change intensifies on Earth, the closed-loop thinking and protective design principles developed for space habitats offer essential frameworks for terrestrial sustainability challenges.
This circular journey—from Earth to space and back to Earth with transformed perspective—may prove space habitation's most valuable contribution: not just enabling cosmic expansion, but providing new understanding of our relationship with the technological and natural systems that sustain all life.
Drawing from the author's space architecture expertise, this book examines how space habitats reshape identity, social structures, and our understanding of what it means to be human beyond Earth. The work explores the psychology of confinement, the emergence of space-specific cultures, and the philosophical implications of absolute technological dependence.
With a foreword by Frank White (author of "The Overview Effect"), the book bridges space technology with cultural theory, revealing how the design of space habitats will shape humanity's cosmic evolution. As climate change intensifies on Earth, the closed-loop thinking and protective design principles developed for space habitats offer essential frameworks for terrestrial sustainability challenges.
This circular journey—from Earth to space and back to Earth with transformed perspective—may prove space habitation's most valuable contribution: not just enabling cosmic expansion, but providing new understanding of our relationship with the technological and natural systems that sustain all life.
"When the hatch closes, a boundary forms—not just physical, but psychological. The space inside becomes 'here'; the space outside becomes 'there.' In Earth orbit, 'there' is the vacuum of space. On the Moon or Mars, 'there' is an atmosphere too thin to breathe, temperatures that would freeze blood, radiation that would damage DNA.The line between life and death becomes architectural."
— Anastasia Prosina, Founder & Space Architect
— Anastasia Prosina, Founder & Space Architect
For readers interested in:Space architecture and technology
Cultural studies and anthropology
Future studies and human evolution
Sustainability and closed-loop design
Philosophy of technology
Cultural studies and anthropology
Future studies and human evolution
Sustainability and closed-loop design
Philosophy of technology