Journal
HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF THE LIFE SCIENCES
Volume 43, Issue 1, Pages -Publisher
SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
DOI: 10.1007/s40656-020-00361-8
Keywords
COVID-19; Virus ecology; Shared agency; Anthropology of the virus
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This essay explores the nature of viruses from biological, historical, philosophical, and anthropological perspectives, emphasizing their interconnectedness with human society and history. It argues that the virus blurs distinctions between natural and human-made, biological and social, prompting a reflection on the human condition in the context of the pandemic, essentially creating an anthropology of the virus.
In this brief essay, we combine biological, historical, philosophical and anthropological perspectives to ask anew the question about the nature of the virus. How should we understand Sars-CoV-2 and why does it matter? The argument we present is that the virus undermines any neat distinction between the natural and the human-made, the biological and the social. Rather, to understand the virus and the pandemic we need to understand both as intimately connected to our own social and historical condition. What started as a reflection on the nature of the virus thus turns into a reflection on the human condition as refracted in this pandemic or an anthropology of the virus.
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