ABSTRACT

The coronavirus pandemic forces us to rethink our contemporaneity. It has brought to the surface dimensions of human fragility that partially contradict the euphoria and human hubris of the fourth industrial revolution (artificial intelligence). It has also aggravated the social inequality and racial discrimination that characterize our societies. The book argues that the virus, rather than an enemy, must be viewed as a pedagogue. It is trying to teach us that the deep causes of the pandemic lie in our dominant mode of production and consumption. The systemic overload of natural resources creates a metabolic rift between society and nature that destabilizes the habitat of wild animals and the vital cycles of natural regeneration whereby pandemics become an increasingly recurrent phenomenon. In trying to take seriously this lesson the book proposes a paradigmatic shift from the current civilizatory model to a new one guided by a more equitable relationship between nature and society and the priority of life, both human and non-human.

part one|126 pages

The 21st century presents itself

chapter Chapter 1|21 pages

The pandemic and the contradictions of contemporaneity

chapter Chapter 2|34 pages

Abyssal capitalism

The pandemic as business

chapter Chapter 3|34 pages

The open veins of inequality and discrimination

chapter Chapter 4|35 pages

Community resistance and self-organization

part two|89 pages

The future starts now

chapter Chapter 5|20 pages

Three scenarios

Between hell redux and kairós

chapter Chapter 7|23 pages

The paradigmatic transition

A world to accommodate many worlds

chapter Chapter 8|19 pages

First steps in the paradigmatic transition

chapter |4 pages

Epilogue

What if we failed? To be read in 2050