fossil-fuel-myth
The idea that fossil fuel consumption is mythologically connected to religious expectation, where each use brings humanity closer to divine revelation.
1 chapter across 1 book
Cyclonopedia: complicity with anonymous materials (2008)Reza Negarestani
This chapter explores the intertwining of fossil fuel consumption with monotheistic religious belief systems, particularly focusing on how the exhaustion of Earth's energy resources is framed as a prerequisite for divine revelation and apocalyptic fulfillment. It examines the symbolic and political roles of oil as both a material and metaphysical agent, linking petropolitics to religious anticipation and the dynamics of hope and despair. The chapter also delves into esoteric religious geometries and sorcery, analyzing the transformation of sacred symbols like the Cross of Akht into monotheistic forms that encode betrayal, decay, and the complex interplay of divine and demonic forces within Middle Eastern religious and political frameworks.