Corona Pandemic as an Invisible-Manifest Civil War (original) (raw)
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PlanetMacneil, 2020
The major purpose of this dissertation is to help you to be free of the fear of COVID, a fear that has been established and built by a worldwide assault by governments, transnational agencies like the WHO and NGO Foundations with a budget of billions who have a vested interest in promoting that fear. Although COVID-19 is a real virus, a fake crisis was created around it and we will be investigating how and why we have become the victims of that hoax. I write that you might find your individuality and freedom to speak once again by being armed with the necessary scientific, medical and political facts concerning the management of the pandemic. Once you are free of the fear of COVID and any subsequent pandemic, you can stand up for your freedom to live without governmental interference of your rights to work, trade, assemble, socialise and worship.
The pandemic that poses challenges beyond health
Policy Brief, 2021
The more we can advance in knowledge about the New Coronavirus (COVID-19), the greater are the chances of fighting it. In this sense, the achievements of science have been impressive. However, it is essential to reflect on the impacts of the current pandemic on the economic, political, and social spheres, beyond the acceleration of global power reorganization whose epicenter may no longer be restricted to the developed West. Concerning the economy, the scenario is of bankruptcies and market concentration among large companies. In the orbit of politics, polarization, and worsening of xenophobic nationalism. In the social sphere, unemployment and increasing inequalities. About global power, the growing projection of East Asia is imposed on decision-makers at the same speed with which dissent divides opinions on these themes.
The Virus of the Question. The Phenomenology of the COVID-19 Pandemic
Phainomena, 2021
The purpose of this paper is a presentation of ordinary experience of the pandemic caused by the COVID-19 virus. By illuminating fundamental moments of the said experience, this analysis attempts to uncover its deeper dynamics, here described by dint of the notion of questionableness, which—as it transpires—stands in some conflict with what can be observed at the level of ordinary ways of its articulations (shaped and spread by public opinion, which very much desires an answer). The experience of the pandemic uncovers the existence of a certain conflict between its more superficial layer, characterizing a social-political dimension of human existence, and its deeper layer, which unfolds at the level of individual life. This conflict constitutes a manifestation of a few-century-long and evermore aggravated divergence of two sorts of experiences: the objectifying scientific-technical and the existential one.
The Coronavirus Pandemic as the Crisis of Civilization
Our Place in the World: A Journal of Ecosocialism, 2020
In this essay, I will argue that the Coronavirus pandemic adds the infectious diseases as an existential threat to humanity to the ealier widely acknowledged such threats: catastrophic climate change, the Sixth Extinction, and nuclear holacaust. I will then proceed to argue that mainstream and Marxian theories of crisis by their philosophical and methodological underpinning cannot explain such crisis. I will discuss these and propose an ecological theory of human nature, hence an ecological and social theory of history using insights from Marx's and Engel's own materialist conception of history as well as accumulated scientific knowledge over the course of past 150 years, especially in anthropology, archeology, and biology.
V. 13, n. 02, 2021
The circulation of the SARS-COV-2 virus has generated a whole range of economic, social, health and securitarian effects on the planetary population, the consequences of which are not only reduced to the containment of mass contagion, but have had an impact on the daily lives of humans. As a result of the biopolitical strategies implemented by different States, the biological life of human beings is currently governed by other means justified in order to maintain health or prevent death from COVID-19 disease. The essay main goal is to analyze this event through concepts proposed and developed by Michel Foucault concerning biopower and biopolitics. These concepts can criticize the power over life exercised by both States and international organizations seeking to regulate the effects of the virus and disease. Also, through the framework of biopolitics, we can show the characteristic event of the 21st century: the transition from epidemics and endemics to pandemics. What this essay is trying to show is the extreme biologization of the lives of humans who cannot delinquete from that identity, on which it operates a whole series of biopolitical strategies to control it.
Coronavirus Pandemic: Nature Strikes back?
Review of Human Rights, 2020
Employing an ontological approach to the coronavirus pandemic, this essay problematizes the relationship between modernity and the Nature. I suggest that the notion of scientific conquest of the Nature is not only flawed, but also counter-productive to our progress. Moreover, I suggest that this notion is adding to the development of the authoritarian state with mass-surveillance infrastructure. Key words: coronavirus, ontology, modernity, Nature, state surveillance.
COVID-19 Pandemic – Philosophical Approaches
The paper begins with a retrospective of the debates on the origin of life: the virus or the cell? The virus needs a cell for replication, instead the cell is a more evolved form on the evolutionary scale of life. In addition, the study of viruses raises pressing conceptual and philosophical questions about their nature, their classification, and their place in the biological world. The subject of pandemics is approached starting from the existentialism of Albert Camus and Sartre, the replacement of the exclusion ritual with the disciplinary mechanism of Michel Foucault, and about the Gaia hypothesis, developed by James Lovelock and supported in the current pandemic by Bruno Latour. The social dimensions of pandemics, their connection to global warming, which has led to an increase in infectious diseases, and the deforestation of large areas, which have caused viruses to migrate from their native area (their "reservoir") are highlighted below. The ethics of pandemics is ap...