In the early twenty-first century, the human imagination of space remained tethered to a familiar axis: either to find life as it exists on Earth, or to recreate Earth elsewhere. These twin ambitions—central to astrobiology and planetary engineering—shaped the dominant trajectories of exploration. One looked outward in search of recognition; the other imposed inward familiarity upon the unknown. Despite their differences, both shared a deeper assumption: that life, to be meaningful, must resemble what is already known.
Yet a different vision began to take form—one that questioned not only the methods of exploration, but its underlying premise. In Planetary Foresight and Ethics (2025), a third alternative emerged, reframing the problem at its root. Instead of asking where Earth-like life might be found, or how Earth-like conditions might be replicated, it proposed a more radical inquiry: what are the most general conditions under which life-like, intelligent processes can arise at all?
This shift drew from two converging domains: the study of Abiogenesis and the accelerating capabilities of artificial intelligence. Together, they suggested that life need not be understood as a fixed template, but as a spectrum of possibilities—emergent from underlying chemical, energetic, and systemic conditions that may differ dramatically across environments. From this insight arose the concept of anthrosporia.
Anthrosporia does not seek to transplant life, nor to detect it in familiar forms. Rather, it aims to seed the conditions under which life might emerge—independently, unpredictably, and in forms that may bear little resemblance to terrestrial biology. It is not colonization, but facilitation; not replication, but generative openness. In this sense, it reimagines humanity’s role in the cosmos—not as an architect imposing design, but as a catalyst enabling possibility.
This vision aligns with a broader idea of ecopoiesis, yet extends it into a more speculative and expansive domain: a cosmic ecopoiesis. Planets are no longer targets for habitation or observation alone, but sites of potential becoming. Each atmosphere, each chemical milieu, becomes an experiment in emergence. The goal is not to make Mars into Earth, nor to find Earth on distant exoplanets, but to allow Mars—or any world—to become something else entirely.
Here, artificial intelligence assumes a pivotal role. Not as an instrument of domination or control, but as an exploratory partner capable of traversing complexities beyond human cognition. By probing Earth’s deep past, AI can help uncover the fundamental principles that enabled life to arise from non-life. It can simulate alternative chemistries, model exotic environments, and identify pathways of emergence that would otherwise remain inaccessible. In doing so, it expands the horizon of what counts as “life” itself.
Paradoxically, this outward-looking vision redirects attention inward. Earth remains the only known instance of life, and thus the only empirical archive of its origins. To understand life in its most general form, one must first interrogate its singular occurrence here. It is even conceivable—by analogy to certain structures in mathematics—that Earth represents a unique realization, a rare convergence of conditions not easily replicated. If so, the search for life elsewhere, or the attempt to reproduce it, may be fundamentally misguided.
From this reframing, three distinct planetary futures come into view.
The first is the Terraforming Future, in which planets are engineered to resemble Earth. This path extends human habitability, but narrows the spectrum of possible life by imposing terrestrial constraints on alien worlds. It is a future of control, optimization, and familiarity.
The second is the Detection Future, where exploration is guided by the search for Earth-like organisms. Here, the universe is scanned for echoes of home, reinforcing an anthropocentric definition of life. It is a future of recognition, but also of limitation—seeing only what one already knows how to see.
The third is the Anthrosporic Future. In this vision, humans, in partnership with artificial intelligence, cultivate the conditions for entirely novel life systems to emerge. It embraces uncertainty, emergence, and radical diversity. It relinquishes the need for resemblance and accepts that the most meaningful forms of life may be those least like ourselves.
In such a future, humanity’s role is neither that of settler nor observer, nor even that of transcendent engineer. It becomes something quieter, yet more profound: a participant in the unfolding plurality of existence. A catalyst, rather than a controller. A presence that does not dictate outcomes, but enables them.
The greatest frontier, then, may not lie in the distant reaches of space, but in the conceptual shift that allows life to be understood anew—not as a singular pattern to be found or copied, but as a vast field of possibilities waiting, under the right conditions, to emerge.


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Scenario A — Brain Size Continues to Decrease


In Summary