ABSTRACT

The first fact that appears to be incontestable is exponential rate with which hospitalizations and deaths increase, doubling in number every two or three days. Certainly not everyone thinks that kids gathering to celebrate birthday, or that elderly who insist on having a coffee in a bar, despite these measures, are irresponsible "criminals". Therefore, demanding mitigation or even a suspension of these measures would be, at the moment, a futile and unpopular move, especially since no one seems to have a viable alternative. For at least a century, modern social mechanisms have tended to generate society based on isolation, in which the spontaneity of social life is perceived as an obstacle or even a threat to the stability of the system. More generally, all of the reader will discover that, ultimately, there is no social life that does not involve risk of contagion, just as there is no organic life that does not involve the risk of disease and death.