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An All–Too–Human Virus

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In the past, pandemics were considered divine punishment, but we now understand the biological characteristics of viruses and we know they are spread through social interaction. What used to be divine has become human – all too human, as Nietzsche would say.

But while the virus dispels the divine, we are discovering that living beings are more complex and harder to define than we had previously imagined, and also that political power is more complex than we may have thought. And this, argues Nancy, helps us to see why the term ‘biopolitics’ fails to grasp the conditions in which we now find ourselves. Life and politics challenge us together. Our scientific knowledge tells us that we are dependent only on our own technical power, but can we rely on technologies when knowledge itself includes uncertainties? If this is the case for technical power, it is much more so for political power, even when it presents itself as guided by objective data.

The virus is a magnifying glass that reveals the contradictions, limitations and frailties of the human condition, calling into question as never before our stubborn belief in progress and our hubristic sense of our own indestructibility as a species.

Author: Nancy Jean-Luc
Publisher: POLITY PRESS
Pages: 100
ISBN: 9781509550227
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2021

Publisher’s Note


Preface


Prologue


I. An All-Too-Human Virus
        
II. “Communovirus”
                         
III. Let Us Be Infants
                      
IV. Evil and Power
                           
V. Freedom
                             
VI. Neo-Viralism
                             
VII. To Free Freedom
                        
VIII. The Useful and the Useless
                  
IX. Still All Too Human
                            
Appendix 1: Interview with Nicolas Dutent
         
Appendix 2: From the Future to the Time to Come: The Revolution of the Virus (with Jean-François Bouthors)
                               
Sources of the Texts

Jean-Luc Nancy is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Université Marc Bloch in Strasbourg and teaches Political Philosophy and Media Aesthetics at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee.

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