Cosmicism as philosophy
A defence of cosmicism as more than literary gloom: an account of reality in which human values are local achievements rather than furniture built into the universe.
Read essayCosmicism without consolation
A philosophical atlas of the uncentred universe
City of Dis treats cosmicism not as decoration, tentacle wallpaper, or adolescent despair, but as a serious philosophical position: the thought that reality is not arranged for human comprehension, consolation, or moral centrality.
The site uses words such as metaphysics, epistemology, naturalism, atheism, cosmicism, nihilism, theodicy, teleology, and sacred special pleading with some precision. Unless that vocabulary is understood, the rest becomes a beautifully decorated waste of everyone’s afternoon.
Begin with the definitions page: a working guide to the terms used across City of Dis, and to the particular kinds of nonsense those terms are designed to stop at the border.
Read the definitions pageEssays on cosmic indifference, anti-anthropocentrism, epistemic humility, religion, science, consciousness, and the permanent embarrassment of human certainty.
A defence of cosmicism as more than literary gloom: an account of reality in which human values are local achievements rather than furniture built into the universe.
Read essayThe universe is not improved by being made emotionally useful. This piece examines the temptation to confuse existential comfort with metaphysical evidence.
Read argumentA cosmicist account of politics: not salvation, not destiny, but fragile civic responsibility beneath an indifferent sky.
Read essayIf a deity behaves like a provincial monarch with a surveillance obsession, perhaps the problem is not atheism. Perhaps the god is simply too small for the cosmos.
Read essayA cosmicist critique of the cosmological argument as theological consolation dressed in the borrowed clothing of metaphysical necessity.
Read essayTo take cosmicism seriously is not to surrender meaning. It is to stop pretending the universe owes us one.
This site begins from a cold premise: human beings are not the axis around which reality turns. Our categories are useful, partial, local, and fragile. We build mathematics, myths, cities, religions, machines, and moral orders beneath a sky that neither applauds nor condemns us.
That does not make life worthless. It makes value our responsibility rather than our inheritance. The absence of cosmic flattery is not nihilism. It is the beginning of adulthood.
Fictional fragments, philosophical horror, speculative parables, and ruins from futures in which humanity finally learns it was never the intended audience.
A first-principles descent through observation, delusion, and the moral hazard of refusing the curve.
A book of prophecy, probability, lottery numbers, and contractual unpleasantness beyond the dawn of space-time.
When a colony discovers that the signal from the void is not a message, but a measurement.
A research group discovers an intelligence so vast that contact fails not through hostility, but because humanity does not register as a relevant category.
An alien crusade arrives in Earth orbit, seeking the sinners who supposedly brought death into the universe six thousand years ago.
A Doctor Who continuation of The Satan Pit, where Time Lord certainty meets older machinery, human belief, and Lovecraftian cosmic indifference.
Short essays, polemics, notes, and regrettably necessary corrections of popular nonsense from the lit perimeter of the abyss.
A brief examination of the modern habit of demanding that reality validate our emotional architecture.
Open dispatchWhen a claim is protected from ordinary standards of evidence, the problem is not the critic’s closed mind.
Open dispatchOn metaphysical products designed to convert terror into obedience and mystery into subscription revenue.
Open dispatchA working index of replies, polemics, and reusable counters to the apologetic confusions that thrive in the comment-section swamp.
Open index