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Dhaka Tribune

A need for conceptual transformation

We need to make ethical decisions provided by an eclectic mix of experts

Update : 29 Apr 2020, 07:48 PM

An ongoing, debilitating pandemic of coronavirus has exposed how rapidly human society is decaying. Sadly, it has revealed how unprepared we are, for life.

Should we adopt a secular or religious solution to the chaos? Or, should we listen to politicians or the ulema (religious scholars)?

Should we pray harder or provide more hand sanitizer? Is physical distancing more important than attending Friday prayers? Are conspiracy theories a manifestation of divine interference? Most importantly, are these the right questions to ask?

Philosophical questions have existed for millennia. Obviously, we are not better off now. Societies continue to be affected by cyclical affects of human activity. The archaeological site in China, Hamin Mangha, dates back to about 3000BC.

An epidemic wiped out this prehistoric village. The Great Plague of 14th century Europe had resulted in millions of deaths. Societies overcame, recovered, and grew.

Currently, 209,000 people have died from Covid-19, with more to come. Once again, our economies will recover, and society will move on.

Eventually, life will get back to normal, our economies will re-generate wealth and we will continue to argue about politics and religion. Humans will plod along, accepting that pandemics are nature’s way of maintaining equilibrium. However, as we keep advancing scientifically and technologically, so will we drift further away from what this balance really means.

The death of society will continue long after a vaccination is created. It is irrelevant whether the stock market improves, unemployment decreases, and the price of crude oil reverts to a healthy level. Decay has already set in because we persist in asking the wrong questions.

The new normal everyone is bandying around is premised on misconstrued values. How can education save us? Unless we are taught to ask the question first to ourselves, then to our teachers, we cannot proceed further.

The next question is: How do we get our society back on track after the controlled movement orders, and lockdowns are lifted? Among the most important tasks is to generate jobs, reduce poverty, and rebuild equity.

It is suggested too, that universities accelerate their research into the following areas:

Protection of vulnerable populations from epidemics and catastrophes. How data and technology can help us mitigate a crisis, and prevent its recurrence. Understanding the mental effects of confinement and physical distancing. How we can reinforce our health infrastructure and ecosystem so front-liners and other caregivers can be better prepared.

Connecting climate change, loss of biodiversity, and the origin of viral diseases. Connecting socioeconomic dynamics with the outbreak and spread of infectious diseases.

Missing from this list is how to slow down. How to reduce the need for excessive resources, how to be satisfied with living on less and to re-define the concept of wealth.

Research into these areas should be carried out by philosophers, historians of science, theologians, and jurists.

They should begin their search for a delicate, ethical balancing act, as most of us prepare to reopen society after a global lockdown.

There has been a surge in domestic violence during the lockdown period. This abuse exists in both urban and rural societies, including our own in the countries of the sub-continent.

We need to engage the services of historians of industrialization. This is because the current crisis is systemic. It needs to be dissected from every angle, across every historical era.

We need to trace how and why violence between the genders evolved. Did the human ego deteriorate over time despite economic and technological advances? Or have these advances been a catalyst for gender abuse?

Ethicists and philosophers should deconstruct why Singapore’s latest surge in Covid-19 infections is offset by a very low number of deaths. While Bangladesh and Pakistan’s confirmed infections are considerably lower, there are many more deaths.

We should take a closer look at the underlying health conditions of our population, of which diabetes and heart disease are prominent.

Growing obesity in our societies has gained foothold. The nations of South and Southeastern Asia also have the honour of being some of the more obese Asian countries, where approximately half of the population is overweight. In 2019, Bangladesh had one of the highest rate of diabetes in Asia and one of the highest in the planet. I would rather call this emerging phenomenon: “A near perfect storm.”

Weight control and attitudes towards over-eating are not solely the work of nutritionists. Ethicists and philosophers play a vital role. They need to persist in discourse on how different societies exercise their freedom of choice.

Prevention of obesity means giving up choices. The trade-off is a curb on personal freedom. For example, should government policy dictate the kind of workforce an industry employs, which may reject someone, solely on his/her obesity? Can or should jurists step in to justify such policy?

Or, is it morally prudent for ethicists to convince society that such a policy will prove sustainable for society in the long run?

In the final analysis, it explains how different cultures survive catastrophic pandemics. It will help overcome societal upheaval, by applying technical, ethical, and spiritual data.

Current research into boosting the immune system has a psychological and philosophical dimension. The global frenzy to find a vaccine for Covid-19 has ignored these dimensions.

We need to conduct more research on human stress and its association with the concepts of time and progress. We have neglected the non-physical aspects of human development and progress.

We have neglected the finer points of what makes us human. Our humanity is not premised on more economic output in less time, while accommodating the SDGs set by the UN.

It is also more than just a healthy liver, cholesterol-free arteries, or perfect brain chemistry. Humanity is in desperate need of a direct-line to the ministers, governments, and other decision-makers. It needs help with ethical decisions provided by an eclectic mix of experts who need to ask difficult questions.

We need more than all-of-society response. We require a conceptual transformation of what our humanity is. Covid-19 has provided the proof that we have been ignorant of the answer, thus far, and shall continue to remain so.

Nazarul Islam is an educator based in Chicago.

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