Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Bhakti as Relational Civilization

Reframing civilization not as collection of systems but as web of relationships requiring constant reciprocal attention and mutual obligation.

Mira
Why It Matters

Bhakti is fundamentally relational—it posits reality as connection between lover and beloved. Mirabai did not pursue abstract truth but sang to a specific, intimate presence. This relational ontology offers crucial reorientation for civilizational thought. We often treat civilization as technical problem-solving: systems to optimize, resources to allocate, risks to mitigate. Bhakti reframes it as relationship: between humans and the living world, between present and future generations, between our stated values and our choices. This transforms the question from "How do we sustain civilization?" to "What relationships do we owe?" Relational framing clarifies obligations we cannot quantify: to rivers, to mycorrhizal networks, to communities we'll never meet. It makes anticipated loss personal rather than abstract. When we grieve civilization, we are not grieving GDP or technological prowess; we are grieving broken relationships, the sundering of the web we depend on. This emotional clarity motivates deeper transformation than systems-analysis alone.

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Mira
Love & Relationships
Peri
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