Editorial
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.12726/tjp.24.0Abstract
In an excellent article, “Struggling with the uncertainty of life under coronavirus? How Kierkegaard’s philosophy can help”, published in The Conversation, Patrick Stokes, presents an analysis of life and uncertainty during COVID 19 in the world. The world, people, their lives, dreams and aspirations, the very possibility of a future, the nature and reality of it faced an enormous challenge – the challenge of presence, or the existence or being after the pandemic. This could be because many of us could not conceive what after meant. New vocabulary, newer appearances and still newer methods of communication alerted to a “new normal”. Many students, teachers, workers from all spheres of life, people in general, did not always felt jubilant with the attempted vibrancy of the term, “now normal”. People waited.
References
Stokes, P. (2020). Struggling with the uncertainty of life under coronavirus? How Kierkegaard’s philosophy can help. The Conversation. Retrieved from https://theconversation.com/struggling-with-the-uncertainty-of-life-under-coronavirus-how-kierkegaards-philosophy-can-help-144671
Smith, A. P. (2013). Philosophy and ecology. In A non-philosophical theory of nature (pp. 27-44). Palgrave Macmillan, New York
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