David J. Rosner
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Ambiguity and catastrophe
Crises of understanding in the age of COVID- 19
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This chapter discusses the interrelation between contingency, uncertainty and ambiguity as applied to the COVID-19 pandemic. It will ground this analysis in a discussion of a specific cultural context, that of the USA. The chapter will start, in the spirit of a philosophical anthropology, with analyses of how catastrophes, such as pandemics, world wars, natural disasters and genocides, suddenly reveal the uncertainty, contingency and ambiguity of the world. The chapter then explores how specific cultural and political factors in the USA unfolded in such a way that COVID-19 produced a particularly deep and recalcitrant sense of epistemological trauma and a crisis of understanding. Arguments will then be offered to show that, when perspectives of open-endedness, open-mindedness and humility are embraced, new perspectives, scientific advances and novel solutions to existing problems are more easily produced.

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