Humans are not fixed entities, containers of traits, or passive recipients of circumstance. We are relational processes, constantly enacting and navigating potentialities. Possibility is not abstract; it is perspectival, situated, and co-actualised through interaction with other humans, symbolic systems, and the broader cosmos.
Our choices, behaviours, and practices are cuts in a field of potential: each act of meaning-making, each social negotiation, each imaginative leap is an actualisation of possibility. Human agency is thus relational, emergent, and structured — shaped by constraints and affordances but never fully determined by them.
To understand human possibility, we must shift focus from traits and outcomes to relations and enactments: how collectives stabilise norms, how individuals navigate these structures, and how perspectives co-individuate new modes of being. In this sense, humanity is always becoming, and the study of human possibility is the study of the processes that weave potential into actuality.
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