In an era marked by climate change, ecological degradation, and widespread environmental destruction, the urgent need for integrative mutualisms and perspectivism has never been clearer. Architecture, as both discipline and practice, plays a crucial role in shaping sustainable environments. However, dominant paradigms, rooted in mechanistic, separative and extractivist worldviews, often overlook relational and ethical practices that foster planetary coexistence. The contemporary ecological crisis exposes the limitations of these models and calls for a reconnection between the human, the more-than-human, and the environment. By intersecting disciplines such as anthropology, archaeology, art, and architecture, this investigation critiques reductionist narratives often shaped by Eurocentric perspectives.These narratives have historically constrained societal imagination within patriarchal hierarchies that prioritize capital, extraction, and commodification over relational and regenerative practices. This research advocates for alternative paradigms, emphasising co-operation and bio-communitarianisms that support communal growth and ecological flourishing.