From 2026 to 2126, humanity stands at a critical crossroads. Climate change, biodiversity loss, and ecosystem collapse threaten planetary stability. Conventional approaches have largely failed because they view Earth as a mechanical system rather than a living, interconnected microbial network. The Architects of the Universe introduces the CMM1 Hypothesis — Cosmic Dark Matter + Matter + Microbes = One — proposing that microbes are the primary architects of planetary habitability, atmospheres, and cosmic evolution. This preprint explores how adopting the CMM1 framework can shift our trajectory from eco-dystopian collapse toward planetary regeneration over the next century. By aligning technology, agriculture, and policy with microbial intelligence (quorum sensing, electromagnetic signaling, and regenerative cycles), societies can restore soils, stabilize climates, and rebuild biodiversity. Drawing on recent JWST observations of early-universe organic molecules and biodiversity loss projections, the paper argues that the CMM1 Hypothesis offers a timely, scientifically grounded paradigm shift. By 2126, nations and communities that embrace microbial cosmology could achieve a regenerated, living planet and a renewed understanding of humanity’s role within it.
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Charusheel Mane
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Charusheel Mane (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e71467cb99343efc98db2e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19640081