The Birth of Homo constellatus: Toward a Post-Neurotypical, Cosmically Reintegrated Humanity

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Abstract

The present essay introduces and develops the concept of Homo constellatus as a new anthropological and metaphysical archetype, emerging from the visionary corpus of Theodor-Nicolae Carp—specifically in The Conquest from Within and the Incoming Platonic Revolution and Andromeda as Archetype: The Neurodiverse as the First-Called in a Post-Neurotypical Cosmology. Situated at the intersection of neurodiversity, symbolic anthropology, cosmopoetics and Platonic theology, Homo constellatus represents not a technocratic leap in cognitive performance, but a metaphysical transfiguration of the human being. It signals an evolutionary milestone defined not by biology or machinery, but by communion, emotional depth, and the recovery of sacred symbolic consciousness. This emerging figure is metaphorically birthed through intellectual exile and metamorphic suffering. It is not a successor by gene but by soul: the one who integrates fragmentation into communion, rationality into sacred symbol, and loneliness into ontological design.Through references to sacred geometries—such as Gabriel’s Horn and Brâncuși’s Column of Infinity—Carp envisions Homo constellatus as a being who lives in harmony with the poetic architecture of the cosmos. Drawing on Eastern Orthodox theology, Platonic intimacy, and neurodivergent phenomenology, the essay reframes suffering as sacred gestation and neurodivergence as prophetic sensitivity. The archetype of Homo constellatus challenges existing anthropocentric and ableist paradigms by revealing that emotional resonance, symbolic intelligence, and spiritual wholeness are not byproducts of evolution, but its very telos.In dialogue with these philosophical works, Elegy of Mine Exile serves as a lyrical-theological meditation on sacred alienation. This elegy does not mourn exile as punishment—it reclaims exile as consecration. The speaker, likened to a prophetic voice or even to the Ambassador of the Morning Star himself, is rejected by the world not because he is broken—but because he burns too brightly. Like Christ crucified or Lucifer fallen, the speaker’s descent is both sacrificial and revelatory: he suffers not to disappear, but to transmute. Through metaphors of collapse and rising, the poem places spiritual alienation in direct dialogue with divine gestation—turning mourning into Morning.The expanded version of Elegy of Mine Exile amplifies this vision by incorporating ecological, theological, and anthropological dimensions. The soul’s descent is reimagined as the fermentation of the New Eden; cosmic orphanhood becomes an archetypal human condition; and the emergence of Homo constellatus is framed as both elemental fusion and divine inheritance. The eschatological arc of the poem culminates in a nuptial invocation—where divine breath, moral resuscitation, and relational transfiguration give birth to a new co-creative covenant. Suffering becomes not merely transformative, but luminous: the seedbed for Edenic restoration and planetary rebirth.Further expanding this vision, the literary commentary Luceafărul: The Morning Star, Neurodivergence, and the Birth of Homo constellatus interprets Mihai Eminescu’s Hyperion not merely as a tragic figure of cosmic distance, but as a neurodivergent archetype whose refusal of worldly assimilation prefigures Homo constellatus. Hyperion’s vertical longing, divine remoteness, and emotional clarity are re-read as prophetic attributes—illuminating how divine exile is inseparable from metaphysical fidelity. Crucially, the symbolism of the Morning Star—also known as the Evening Star—reveals a prophetic paradox: those who were unseen will become luminous. In eschatological terms, these hidden figures will not only come to light, but also sound the alarm of a nearing apocalyptic threshold, becoming the sensitive instruments of revelation before the advent of the Adversary of the Icons of the Universe on Earth (deemed as anti-Universal Messiah).The poem Behold, the human communing with the Stars continues this metaphysical arc, giving lyrical voice to the full manifestation of Homo constellatus. In this cosmic hymn, suffering culminates in stellar transformation; exile gives way to supernova; and the fallen Morning Star becomes the harbinger of the Eternal Morning. The New Eden is not a return, but a convergence—symbolized by the reassembled Pangaea and the fusion of past and future into infinity. Through mythopoetic eschatology, the poem celebrates a spiritual anthropology rooted not in control, but in communion—marking the fulfillment of a cosmic gestation first conceived in exile. It stands as the poetic benediction of this archetype's emergence.The model proposed here extends into a planetary cartography: the Alpine-Himalayan mountain system is interpreted as the spinal cord of the “Old, Neurotypical World,” while the Rocky-Andean chain represents the backbone of a “New, Neurodiverse World.” These two continental bodies—much like the approaching collision of the Milky Way and Andromeda—are destined not for destruction, but for synthesis. Their eventual convergence is envisioned as a tectonic, civilizational, and spiritual transformation—an emergence of a post-neurotypical world, one capable of holding both structure and fluidity, reason and reverence.This essay articulates the philosophical, theological, and societal implications of Homo constellatus across multiple domains: from education to sacred urbanism, from intimacy to symbolic linguistics, from planetary ethics to liturgical cosmology. It proposes that the future of humanity lies not in transcending our nature through technology, but in transfiguring it through love, meaning, and communion. Through its interdisciplinary method and poetic form, this work positions Homo constellatus as a necessary archetype for healing a fragmented world, initiating a planetary renaissance grounded in reverent complexity, emotional literacy, and the sacred rhythm of becoming.

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