Being at Home in the Metaverse? Prospectus for a Social Imaginary
Tim Gorichanaz

TL;DR
This paper explores the concept of dwelling in the context of the metaverse, analyzing Zuckerberg's vision through Heidegger's philosophy to identify threats and suggest design considerations for better human integration.
Contribution
It offers a philosophical analysis of the metaverse as a social imaginary, highlighting potential threats to human dwelling and proposing ways to enhance its design for better human experience.
Findings
Identification of threats to dwelling in the metaverse
Analysis of Zuckerberg's vision through Heidegger's philosophy
Recommendations for designing the metaverse to support human dwelling
Abstract
The metaverse has seen growing corporate and popular interest over the past few years. While visions vary, the metaverse is generally seen as an extension of the internet that may be developed through advances in a number of digital technologies, such as augmented and virtual reality, as well as new technical infrastructure and standards. The metaverse constitutes an emerging social imaginary, a way of both understanding and directing our shared existence. This paper examines this emerging social imaginary through the phenomenological concept of dwelling, or being at home in the world, as developed by Martin Heidegger. To examine in depth one influential articulation of this social imaginary, this paper focuses on the metaverse as envisioned by Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta (formerly Facebook). The paper presents a thematic analysis of Zuckerberg's public statements regarding the…
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