Feralist Wiki – The Living Encyclopedia of Rewilding

Understanding the trajectory, recognizing Artificiality, returning to natural law.

Feralism is not an ideology, but an orientation of life toward reality.


About the wiki

This wiki is a shared knowledge space built collectively by the feralist community. It is not fixed: each article can evolve, enrich itself, and be refined.

Objectives: - Document the philosophical and practical foundations of Feralism - Offer a systemic understanding of Artificiality - Map the paths of rewilding - Create a common, precise, and living lexicon

This is neither a dogmatic manifesto nor a survival manual—it's a living map of feral territory.

Join the contributors

The feralist wiki is open to anyone who shares an understanding of the trajectory and wishes to contribute to its documentation.

How to contribute:

Contribution principles: - Lucidity before activism - Conceptual precision - Documented sources and references - Sober, direct tone, without unnecessary jargon

We seek contributors with deep understanding of anthropology, ecology, philosophy of technology, or practical experience in rewilding.

Latest additions and changes

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Main Themes

Foundations of Feralism

The fundamental concepts for understanding the feralist worldview.

  • Feralism — General introduction to feral philosophy. Understanding the meaning of the word feral, the difference between naturality and artifice, and why this path is neither a return nor an escape.

  • Artificiality — The sum of all systems that disconnect humans from natural law. How civilization, technology, and abstract economy have formed a web of dependencies.

  • Natural Law — This fundamental principle governing all life. Balance, reciprocity, limits, and cycles—the laws that Artificiality transgresses.

  • The Origin — The first divergence: the domestication of fire. How mastering fire triggered the trajectory leading to Artificiality.

  • Biological Programming — Our natural instincts in an artificial world. How artificial selection transformed human nature into systemic pathology.


The World of Artificiality

The visible and invisible symptoms of a world cut off from natural law.

  • The Symptoms — The visible effects: ecological, social, psychological. Soil death, alienation, surveillance, disease—consequences of a single pattern.

  • False Remedies — Why no reform, faith, or technology can repair this system. The problem is not in the execution: it's in the foundation.

  • Other Paths — Comparison of contemporary responses to the crisis: Transhumanism, Reformism, Anti-technology, Anarcho-primitivism. And why only the feral path traces back to the root cause.


The Feral Path

The path of rewilding: philosophy and practice.

  • Rewilding — Returning to natural law after domestication. Neither a return to the past nor a primitive fantasy: a conscious mutation toward the feral state.

  • Feral Infrastructure — The material foundations of a reintegrated life: Food, habitat, energy, tools, learning. Building the post-artificial world now.

  • Feralist Organization — How to organize without recreating the hierarchies of Artifice. Principles: autonomy, cooperation, decentralization, living coordination.

  • The Transition — Living in Artifice while leaving it. Psychological and practical strategies for a gradual but real mutation.


Consciousness and Lucidity

The inner transformation necessary for rewilding.

  • Neither God Nor Devil — The rejection of supernatural myths. Understanding reality without recourse to morality, punishment, or redemption.

  • Understanding as Action — To see is already to transform. How lucidity imposes the feral response.

  • Feralism as Mutation — An evolution of human consciousness after domestication. Feralism as a new biological phase—neither primitive nor technological.


Living Appendices

Reference tools and additional resources.

  • Timeline of Artificiality — From flame to machine: the map of the pattern. Timeline tracing key stages of the human trajectory.

  • Feralist Lexicon — The words of Feralism defined with precision: Artifice, Domestication, Natural law, Rewilding, Trajectory, etc.

  • Bibliography & Sources — Influences, convergences, and divergences. Anthropology, deep ecology, philosophy of technology, biological materialism.


Manifesto and Organization

The founding texts and the structure of the movement.

  • The Feralist Manifesto — The complete founding text. Understanding the genesis of the movement and the logic of its thought.

  • Our Organization — How the feralist network self-organizes, experiments, and transmits. Direct link to initiatives, workshops, and material projects.


Use the sidebar to navigate between different sections of the wiki. Each article is interconnected and can be read autonomously or as part of systematic reading.

The wiki is alive: it grows, refines itself, corrects itself. Your contribution matters.


Feralist Wiki — The encyclopedia of rewilding