Advisory

Manifesto · Becoming Planetary
Accessing planetary consciousness

When space changes one's representation of the world
Since 1961, every astronaut who has seen Earth from orbit returns with the same representation: a thin film of life on a cosmic rock, with no visible border, fragile. The Overview Effect names this transformation of consciousness, documented over sixty years, regardless of the astronaut's political regime. OneHome transforms NASA DSCOVR images into immersive experiences, giving every human access to the planetary consciousness that, until now, only astronauts possessed.
Astronauts see the Biosphere in its physical reality.
A thin film of life on the surface of a stellar rock. Twenty kilometres between the abyss and the lower atmosphere. A silk veil laid on a body. Political borders do not exist from up there. The Biosphere, however, is there: visible, whole, fragile.
The Overview Effect: the moment when a human sees Gaia and recognizes the creature that gave them life.
Valentina Tereshkova · USSR · 1963
"It doesn't matter what country or what political system you are from. Space brings you together."
Sultan bin Salman Al-Saud · Saudi Arabia · 1985
"The first day, we all pointed to our countries. By the third and fourth day, to our continents. By the fifth day, we were aware of only one Earth."
Loren Acton · USA · 1985
"Down there, enclosed in the thin, moving, incredibly fragile shell of the biosphere, there is everything that is dear to our hearts."
Reinhard Furrer · Germany · 1985
"On my return I would have wished that someone had asked what it was like to be up there, like a star orbiting the Earth."
The Home Planet, Kevin W. Kelley, 1988.
4th ed. · 2019 · AIAA
Frank White, an American space philosopher, coined the term “overview effect” in the 1980s after conducting interviews with dozens of astronauts. He observed a recurring pattern: the return to Earth is accompanied by a lasting reorientation of how the world is perceived.
He presented the concept in 1985 at a Space Studies Institute conference, then published the founding book in 1987. The book was reissued in 1998, 2014, and 2019.
The Overview Effect: Space Exploration and Human Evolution, Houghton Mifflin, 1987.
Short film · 2012
On December 7, 2012, for the 40th anniversary of the Blue Marble photograph taken by Apollo 17, Guy Reid and the Planetary Collective released a free 19-minute short film titled “Overview”: five astronauts describe what orbit changed in their representation of the world.
19 min · dir. Guy Reid · Planetary Collective · Dec 7, 2012
The astronaut returns as an Earthling before a citizen. Planetary identity becomes primary; the others remain whole.
The living world appears as organism, not backdrop. The representation required by narrative IV installs itself at once, without argument.
Astronauts return speaking of love. The energy of union mobilizes when you see the whole Earth from orbit.
The effect does not fade upon return. It reorganizes perception of the world and directs it toward care.
To directly experience what the Earth truly is.
Living
an organism
An organism, not a backdrop. It breathes, regulates, regenerates over billions of years. Its biosphere pulses with each orbit.
Interconnected
one fabric
No border visible from orbit. One single fabric of continuities, with no possible cut between ecosystems.
Finite
visible in full
It can be seen whole in minutes of rotation. No outside to flee to, no elsewhere available.
Without this direct experience, humans reason with old representations, even when educated, even when intellectually convinced.
The Overview Effect installs new ones, in minutes.
~700
human beings have seen the whole Earth
Over sixty years of spaceflight, only astronauts selected by the agencies of major powers have accessed this experience. Commercial space tourism has existed since 2021, but tickets cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, and each launch burns hundreds of tonnes of kerosene or methane.
Sending all of humanity to space is not an answer: not economically, not ecologically, not at the timescale available. Another path was needed.
OneHome is a French non-profit NGO founded by Jean-Pierre Goux, author of the Blue Century saga and creator of the Blue Revolution concept. Its volunteer team transforms 4K images from the DSCOVR satellite into immersive experiences: artistic editing, original music (Yael Naïm, Agoria, Moby), and testimonies from astronauts and planetary thinkers. The videos are free, subtitled in thirteen languages, available for any screening, in any venue, on any screen.
Recommended introduction before each screening
"You are about to discover unique images in human history: the entire Earth, completely illuminated, rotating in space. These real images were filmed 1.5 million kilometres away by NASA's DSCOVR satellite and artistically enhanced by OneHome. They aim to make you experience the Overview Effect — the wonder felt by astronauts seeing Earth from space. Now it's your turn to fall in love with our planet."
Source
NASA DSCOVR · 4K
Languages
13 languages
Access
Free
Ambition
8 billion Homo biospheris
NASA DSCOVR · Point de Lagrange L1 · 1,5 million de km
NASA's DSCOVR satellite is stationed at Lagrange Point L1, where Earth's and the Sun's gravitational forces balance. From this point, Earth is always whole, always fully illuminated. No human being has ever been there. The images DSCOVR produces offer a perspective no astronaut has ever experienced: Earth seen from the outside, in its entirety, permanently. NASA gave Earth a mirror. Blueturn set it in motion. OneHome gave it a heartbeat.
International advisory board
Jean-François Clervoy
Astronaut · ESA
Frank White
Author · The Overview Effect
Kevin W. Kelley
Author · The Home Planet
Abigail Alling
President · Biosphere Foundation
The Blue Revolution is the collective challenge launched by OneHome: project Earth images in 100 countries before April 22, 2026, Earth Day, an audacious bet. Twenty countries had already answered the call before the official launch. On April 22, 2026, the threshold of 100 was crossed and surpassed. For the first time, the same experience of planetary awareness was organized across every continent. That is what “becoming planetary” means in concrete terms.
The principle is deliberately simple: any screening gathering at least ten people counts. In a school, a company, an NGO, a film festival, a family living room, a lecture hall, a meeting room, or on a sheet hung in a garden. Each point on the map is a concrete human reality, not a statistic.
Among the first responses: a film festival in Arctic Iceland, the government of French Polynesia, high schools in Morocco, executive committees across Europe. Jean-Pierre Goux describes the experience this way: “It is a shock of wonder. Suddenly, the planet appears alive, tiny, fragile. We understand that it is our common home, the 'whole' to which we belong.”
01
Choose a video
Download one of the OneHome videos from onehome.org.
02
Host a screening
Gather at least 10 people in the dark. Open a discussion after.
03
Join the map
Register the screening on the Blue Revolution Map. It becomes a glowing point on the globe.
102
countries reached
initial goal: 100
484
screenings organised
worldwide
2,4 M
people reached
in a few years
These numbers are not projections. Each one represents real humans gathered in the dark, facing the whole Earth.
At the source · Jean-Pierre Goux's saga


Blue Century
Actes Sud · 2010 / 2012
Prequel

The Blue Revolution
Eyrolles · 2024 / 2025
In the final pages of the second volume of Blue Century, Paul Gardner, the sole survivor of the lunar mission, is transformed by the sight of Earth from orbit. He envisions a satellite stationed between the Earth and the Sun, capable of filming the entire planet and broadcasting these images to humanity. This dream, written in 2012, describes with precision the DSCOVR satellite that NASA would launch in 2015 at Lagrange Point L1.
In The Blue Revolution, this deployment unfolds: OneHome is born in the fiction, the Blue Revolution spreads from country to country, and humanity begins to see itself from the outside. OneHome, the real NGO, is the materialisation of what the saga had imagined.
Every astronaut returns with a new reflex: to see the Earth as one country, one living and interdependent being. When eight billion humans share this reflex, they no longer decide as before. Homo biospheris begins to exist.
A production of the Planetary Lab
© 2026 Biosphere Economics · CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
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