To insist that we make and inhabit worlds (in the plural) is not to deny a common space of existence. Rather, it is to hold such an idea in tension with another, namely, with the sense that each of us, individually and collectively, also crafts and inhabits distinctive spaces of existence. The ravens that regularly visit the tree outside my window do not experience, understand, and make sense as I do. We inhabit different worlds, populated by different entities, in different relationships. To call these differences “worlds” is to insist that they do not simply reside “in the head” of a human, a raven, or another but rather emerge in relationship with others and ripple out to take material form-more or less consequentially (for whom?)-in the lives these beings live and the ways in which they world to shape the present an the future…To “share” is both to hold in common and to divide something up. (van Dooren, 2019, p. 8)