A Message for a New Era: Towards the Genosphere

05.09.2025

By Valikhan Tuleshov

The newly elected Pope Leo XIV has issued a powerful appeal for unity, calling on humanity to "be one people." In his address, he acknowledged the enduring resonance of Pope Francis's voice, even in the final days of his life, and emphasized the importance of building bridges—a message that deeply echoes the vision put forth by Xi Jinping in 2012, when he proposed the creation of a "Community of Shared Destiny for Humanity."

These parallel calls for unity align closely with our own concept of the Genosphere—a comprehensive and structured framework for constructing a common human civilization. The Genosphere outlines specific causes, pathways, and directions by which civilizations can coexist through mutual enrichment, while preserving their inclusivity and sovereignty.

The future of humanity, we believe, will be composed of multiple civilizations—interacting on equal terms across many levels. While current tensions at the borders of these civilizational zones remain a reality, we hold that within the span of a single human generation, these conflicts will be addressed through mutual understanding and cooperation.

This applies most urgently to the major geopolitical flashpoints of our time: the war between Ukraine and Russia, conflicts in the Middle East, and tensions between India and Pakistan—all of which represent civilizational clashes of significant magnitude. In resolving these, historical truth, moral considerations, and metaphysical contexts will ultimately play decisive roles.

Indeed, recent developments—such as the cultural reintegration of Kakrabah—underscore the importance of moral, cultural-historical, and anthropological foundations in shaping peaceful outcomes. We foresee similar resolutions in long-standing tensions such as those between Moldova and Transnistria, Georgia and South Ossetia, and Georgia and Abkhazia. Unlike the first group of conflicts, these are less likely to escalate into full-scale war, and more likely to evolve into zones of cultural resonance and ontological convergence.

If we were to depict the emerging world order as a tectonic map, the main civilizational "plates" would include: the United States, China, India, the European Union, the Islamic world, the Turkic world, Russia, Africa, and global digital corporations. Friction zones—where civilizational pressures intersect—will include Taiwan, the Arctic, Central Asia (particularly if a Turkic Union fails to materialize), the Balkans, and Cyberspace.

In navigating this transitional period, the following principles of Toponopoly—or geopolitical pluralism—will be essential:

  1. Plurality without universalism

  2. Sovereignty without isolation

  3. Competition without hostility

  4. Technological supremacy as a new axis of power

  5. The cognitive realm as a key arena of influence

We are entering a prolonged phase of tectonic adjustment—where universalist ideologies will gradually lose traction, giving way to a new balance founded on pluralistic multilateralism. This balance will not be born from compromise, but from a conscious weaving together of diverse threads: political, civilizational, and ideological.

In this emerging Genosphere, artificial intelligence, ecology, metascience, and predictive modeling will not be imposed, but will arise organically as the neural architecture of a new world order. We envision a future shaped not by the clash of civilizations, but by their co-creation; not by hierarchy, but by resonance; not by domination, but by collaboration.

In metaphysical and intellectual terms, this vision reflects what Vladimir Vernadsky once called the Noosphere—a realm where human consciousness and the biosphere evolve together.

What do you think of this vision, friends?

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The Logic of Power Within Tectonopoly: Russia's Strategic Stance

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The Age of Tectonopoly: From Global Deconstruction to Civilizational Texturing