Homo Hecmateus and the Ontology of Post-Human Responsibility: A Philosophical Framework Beyond Homo Sapiens and Homo Noeticus

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Abstract

This article proposes Homo Hecmateus as a philosophical and ethical archetype in response to the ontological crisis of the algorithmic age. It critically contrasts this figure with Homo Technologicus, the dominant model of optimization, external control, and digital surveillance, arguing instead for a path grounded in inner governance, ethical responsibility, and posthuman wisdom. Drawing on a wide range of thinkers—Spinoza, Aristotle, Foucault, Zuboff, Harari, Le Guin—the article integrates speculative philosophy with critical theory, outlining a four-stage “spiral of meaning”: knowledge, responsibility, experience, and wisdom. In this model, wisdom is not a retreat from the world but a moral re-engagement with it. The article further incorporates a speculative parable—a Martian allegory—that allegorizes civilizational collapse under technocratic logic and the eventual emergence of a new ethics. Through metaphysical reflection and cultural critique, the figure of Homo Hecmateus becomes an ethical imperative rather than a utopian prophecy. The study aims to reposition philosophical anthropology within the context of digital capitalism, algorithmic governance, and planetary crisis. It advocates a normative transformation: not the optimization of intelligence, but the cultivation of orientation and meaning. Ultimately, the article calls for a new form of human becoming—where conscience, cognition, and action converge.

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