"Getting over the hump" seems like it would take a good deal more than a year or two? — ZhouBoTong
Seems inevitable if the next 6 months is similar to the last 6 days. — ZhouBoTong
From what I understand, China is already over the hump locally, and it's only been like three months, and they didn't take the drastic measures we are. — Pfhorrest
Blame the media for not shutting their materialist faces — Gregory
Well, social distancing is the trendy cordial thing to do.Well that all makes sense. but to flip perspectives, as someone who is often uncomfortable in social situations and definitely has some personal space issues, "social distancing" just means I am no longer rude when I step back from a close talker :smile: — ZhouBoTong
Isn't it more likely that the population will develop natural resistance and immunity to coronavirus before we run out of new circuses?I would think that after a year, people will demand circuses even at the risk of half the world dying. What does everyone else think? — ZhouBoTong
From what I understand, it's not to stop the spread but to slow the spread. — Pfhorrest
I saw a pretty good video about it yesterday that you might like: — Pfhorrest
If Rome's survival depended so much on circuses, wouldn't that make the latter an essential for the former, a need as it were. — TheMadFool
And I worry about how people will begin to act when their emotional needs are neglected. — ZhouBoTong
Yes! that is actually part of my point (obviously not a very clear part, haha). I labelled food, shelter, etc as physical needs not to separate them from circuses as "needs", but to separate them as physical. Circuses satisfy emotional needs. But I agree with you that they are needs. And I worry about how people will begin to act when their emotional needs are neglected. — ZhouBoTong
They'll start going into existential crisis and say "What's the point of anything?" — schopenhauer1
A fish in a bowl swims around, eats, swims a bit more, checks out the castle, swims, swims through the plant, etc. — schopenhauer1
I recall hearing that, there's a difference between not dying and living and in the spirit of this sentence, the priority now is not living but not dying and given that this restructuring of our priorities is a global phenomenon, you're right in saying that entertainment (circuses) isn't really a need. In a sense then we were under the delusion that entertainment was/is a necessity insofar as not dying is our concern. — TheMadFool
First, I think you have pointed out an interesting and potentially important distinction between "living" and "not dying". I mostly agreed, but may have minor contentions...
When not dying is a challenge, circuses aren't needed. But if we look at the current crisis, no one is struggling to not die. It is constantly on the brain RIGHT NOW, so people are not yet bored. But this will not last. People will get bored. It is not like they have to do anything to not die...in fact, everyone needs to largely stop doing stuff. I think they will get bored eventually.
If schools are back in session in the fall, I think there will be no major problems. If they are not, implying that there is at least one more year of this stuff, I think we will see the results of people getting bored. — ZhouBoTong
I wonder what could be more interesting than not dying? :chin: :mask: — TheMadFool
You mean what is more interesting than doing nothing?
Not dying is not necessarily an action, is my point. In the jungle, not dying means running away from the tiger. For the coronavirus, not dying means sitting in my house. — ZhouBoTong
Just as running from the tiger is "interesting", so is sitting in the house, if your life is on the line. — TheMadFool
I find that hard to believe (I know it is 100% false for me personally, but that says exactly nothing about the population as a whole). It is not like it is the zombie apocalypse out there. We will see in a few months I suppose — ZhouBoTong
Well we already know people start asking that question more when their basic physical needs no longer need much effort to take care of. I am suggesting that entertainment has eased this crisis, and a whole chunk of entertainment options has been removed...so how will people react? — ZhouBoTong
I believe the same thing that allows us to choose not to have kids (for example), causes us to be unsatisfied just swimming around the bowl...although I do largely agree, there isn't really more to life than that. — ZhouBoTong
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