Here are some interesting articles I’ve come across recently, for your consideration:
How Coronavirus is shaking up the moral universe. The pandemic is putting profound philosophical questions to the test. (Bloomberg)
A strange paradox: the better we manage to contain the coronavirus pandemic, the less we will learn from it. [By my friend and collaborator, Maarten Boudry] (The Conversation)
Does time really flow? New clues come from a century-old approach to math. (Quanta Magazine)
The attraction of apocalypse. The philosophical roots of our fascination with catastrophe. (Institute of Arts and Ideas)
The scholar’s vocation. A century ago, Max Weber both diagnosed the ills of the corporatised, modern university, and pointed out the path beyond it. (Aeon)
Coronavirus: this is not a plague. The metaphor obscures clear thinking. [Actually, I disagree with the author, but good read nevertheless.] (American Scholar)
The pandemic is not a natural disaster. The coronavirus isn’t just a public-health crisis. It’s an ecological one. [Perfect counter to the article just above] (New Yorker)
It’s the math, stupid. The real pandemic starts the day lockdown ends. (Center for Inquiry)
Ovid on the therapist’s couch. Other writers go to a shrink. Ovid wrote the Heroides. (Medium)
Like the American Scholar piece. It’s got kind of an existential background flavor to it, as in “the plague just IS.”
Liked by 1 person