tab1
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tab1
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September 2011
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tab1
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September 2011
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Apr 3, 2020 2:04:44 GMT 1, Government probably looking forward and want to limit civil unrest as if the public are still in the same position and the number of deaths discussed materialise there will be an element of civil disturbance as seen festering in pockets through out Europe , the government did note further testing needed first , but why release the statement now ? Will cause more anxiety to some if their suggestion does not materialise That is what I suspect to be the reason for Sweden not having a lock down. Civil unrest by certain sections of society. Some French politicians have also said that they want some zones in Paris to be exempt from lock down. The politicians did say migrant zones (their words not mine), to prevent unrest. Some factions are anxious to create unrest it seems. There is all ready unrest in France where in some towns cars set on fire and the police called out and once the police get there they are attacked by people throwing rocks and stuff. In the UK I think it is more a case of if people are not tested and if healthy allowed to work. The whole country could be in lock down for three months and thousands will lose their lively hoods, mall businesses and jobs and the economy and people might not recover for a long time. The Mayor of New York proposed the same thing the other week, that people are tested and healthy people allowed to go to work. Have not ruled out it can reoccur once infected and recovered or if mutations are present yet ? Should of released the statement after tests are concluded otherwise the second wave or if mutations occur may be a lot worse to those out in public
Government probably looking forward and want to limit civil unrest as if the public are still in the same position and the number of deaths discussed materialise there will be an element of civil disturbance as seen festering in pockets through out Europe , the government did note further testing needed first , but why release the statement now ? Will cause more anxiety to some if their suggestion does not materialise That is what I suspect to be the reason for Sweden not having a lock down. Civil unrest by certain sections of society. Some French politicians have also said that they want some zones in Paris to be exempt from lock down. The politicians did say migrant zones (their words not mine), to prevent unrest. Some factions are anxious to create unrest it seems. There is all ready unrest in France where in some towns cars set on fire and the police called out and once the police get there they are attacked by people throwing rocks and stuff. In the UK I think it is more a case of if people are not tested and if healthy allowed to work. The whole country could be in lock down for three months and thousands will lose their lively hoods, mall businesses and jobs and the economy and people might not recover for a long time. The Mayor of New York proposed the same thing the other week, that people are tested and healthy people allowed to go to work. Have not ruled out it can reoccur once infected and recovered or if mutations are present yet ? Should of released the statement after tests are concluded otherwise the second wave or if mutations occur may be a lot worse to those out in public
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tab1
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September 2011
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Apr 3, 2020 3:31:30 GMT 1, www.who.int/news-room/q-a-detail/q-a-similarities-and-differences-covid-19-and-influenza
An old release but written with data at the time supplied by China , which most countries had been using for their initial response and reaction To covid 19 br] If China was found to purposefully under reported cases , what actions can the countries take that were using these flawed data ? Even all response times and incubation periods are still using Wuhan data on WHO site
At what number of tests do countries start using their own data ?
www.who.int/news-room/q-a-detail/q-a-similarities-and-differences-covid-19-and-influenzaAn old release but written with data at the time supplied by China , which most countries had been using for their initial response and reaction To covid 19 br] If China was found to purposefully under reported cases , what actions can the countries take that were using these flawed data ? Even all response times and incubation periods are still using Wuhan data on WHO site At what number of tests do countries start using their own data ?
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wrigs
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July 2017
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by wrigs on Apr 3, 2020 7:55:28 GMT 1, ย That is what I suspect to be the reason for Sweden not having a lock down. Civil unrest by certain sections of society. ย Some French politicians have also said that they want some zones in Paris to be exempt from lock down. The politicians did say migrant zones (their words not mine), to prevent unrest. ย Some factions are anxious to create unrest it seems. ย There is all ready unrest in France where in some towns cars set on fire and the police called out and once the police get there they are attacked by people throwing rocks and stuff. ย ย In the UK I think it is more a case of if people are not tested and if healthy allowed to work. The whole country could be in lock down for three months and thousands will lose their lively hoods, mall businesses and jobs and the economy and people might not recover for a long time. The Mayor of New York proposed the same thing the other week, that people are tested and healthy people allowed to go to work. Have not ruled out it can reoccur once infected and recovered or if mutations are present yet ?ย Should of released the statement after tests are concludedย otherwise the second wave or if mutations occur may be a lot worse to those out in publicย
You keep referring to this new mutation that would be more harmful to the public. Viruses are still subject to the same evolutionary pressures as everything else therefore theres absolutely no benefit for them to evolve to kill their hosts quickly therefore not having time to spread. Itโs quite likely it would evolve to become less deadly
ย That is what I suspect to be the reason for Sweden not having a lock down. Civil unrest by certain sections of society. ย Some French politicians have also said that they want some zones in Paris to be exempt from lock down. The politicians did say migrant zones (their words not mine), to prevent unrest. ย Some factions are anxious to create unrest it seems. ย There is all ready unrest in France where in some towns cars set on fire and the police called out and once the police get there they are attacked by people throwing rocks and stuff. ย ย In the UK I think it is more a case of if people are not tested and if healthy allowed to work. The whole country could be in lock down for three months and thousands will lose their lively hoods, mall businesses and jobs and the economy and people might not recover for a long time. The Mayor of New York proposed the same thing the other week, that people are tested and healthy people allowed to go to work. Have not ruled out it can reoccur once infected and recovered or if mutations are present yet ?ย Should of released the statement after tests are concludedย otherwise the second wave or if mutations occur may be a lot worse to those out in publicย You keep referring to this new mutation that would be more harmful to the public. Viruses are still subject to the same evolutionary pressures as everything else therefore theres absolutely no benefit for them to evolve to kill their hosts quickly therefore not having time to spread. Itโs quite likely it would evolve to become less deadly
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pellets
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October 2018
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by pellets on Apr 3, 2020 10:07:18 GMT 1, Rubbish only two pages ๐Next time you log in drop a link on the thread to this thread ๐๐๐ฌ
Yeah, the people on that site defo seem more crazy than us. Plus they were all asking questions instead of bringing excellent reportage from leading sources to the table.
Rubbish only two pages ๐Next time you log in drop a link on the thread to this thread ๐๐๐ฌ Yeah, the people on that site defo seem more crazy than us. Plus they were all asking questions instead of bringing excellent reportage from leading sources to the table.
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pellets
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October 2018
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by pellets on Apr 3, 2020 10:13:42 GMT 1, Government probably looking forward and want to limit civil unrest as if the public are still in the same position and the number of deaths discussed materialise there will be an element of civil disturbance as seen festering in pockets ย through out Europe , the government did note further testing needed first , but why release the statement now ? Will cause more anxiety to some if their suggestion does not materialiseย ย That is what I suspect to be the reason for Sweden not having a lock down. Civil unrest by certain sections of society. ย Some French politicians have also said that they want some zones in Paris to be exempt from lock down. The politicians did say migrant zones (their words not mine), to prevent unrest. ย Some factions are anxious to create unrest it seems. ย There is all ready unrest in France where in some towns cars set on fire and the police called out and once the police get there they are attacked by people throwing rocks and stuff. ย ย In the UK I think it is more a case of if people are not tested and if healthy allowed to work. The whole country could be in lock down for three months and thousands will lose their lively hoods, mall businesses and jobs and the economy and people might not recover for a long time. The Mayor of New York proposed the same thing the other week, that people are tested and healthy people allowed to go to work.
Someone had previously posted the below link giving the explanation that Sweden is in lockdown, its just that they have a โhigh trust societyโ, so they dont been to force people to stay at home. They just ask people to do things for the greater good and they all conply (fancy that).
The article also indicates that Sweden has a separation between the health ministry and politicians, so there is no political thinking needed when considering the advice of the health ministry. If the experts say measures are needed then everyone follows. This creates a stressful situation for the health ministry because people trust them and that trust requires the ministry to deliver on its end.
foreignpolicy.com/2020/03/24/sweden-coronavirus-open-for-business/
Government probably looking forward and want to limit civil unrest as if the public are still in the same position and the number of deaths discussed materialise there will be an element of civil disturbance as seen festering in pockets ย through out Europe , the government did note further testing needed first , but why release the statement now ? Will cause more anxiety to some if their suggestion does not materialiseย ย That is what I suspect to be the reason for Sweden not having a lock down. Civil unrest by certain sections of society. ย Some French politicians have also said that they want some zones in Paris to be exempt from lock down. The politicians did say migrant zones (their words not mine), to prevent unrest. ย Some factions are anxious to create unrest it seems. ย There is all ready unrest in France where in some towns cars set on fire and the police called out and once the police get there they are attacked by people throwing rocks and stuff. ย ย In the UK I think it is more a case of if people are not tested and if healthy allowed to work. The whole country could be in lock down for three months and thousands will lose their lively hoods, mall businesses and jobs and the economy and people might not recover for a long time. The Mayor of New York proposed the same thing the other week, that people are tested and healthy people allowed to go to work. Someone had previously posted the below link giving the explanation that Sweden is in lockdown, its just that they have a โhigh trust societyโ, so they dont been to force people to stay at home. They just ask people to do things for the greater good and they all conply (fancy that). The article also indicates that Sweden has a separation between the health ministry and politicians, so there is no political thinking needed when considering the advice of the health ministry. If the experts say measures are needed then everyone follows. This creates a stressful situation for the health ministry because people trust them and that trust requires the ministry to deliver on its end. foreignpolicy.com/2020/03/24/sweden-coronavirus-open-for-business/
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pellets
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October 2018
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by pellets on Apr 3, 2020 10:41:55 GMT 1, www.who.int/news-room/q-a-detail/q-a-similarities-and-differences-covid-19-and-influenzaAn old release but written with data at the time supplied by China , which most countries had been using for their initial response and reaction To covid 19 br] If China was found to purposefully under reported cases , what actions can the countries take that were using these flawed data ? Even all response times and incubation periods are still using Wuhan data on WHO site At what number of tests do countries start using their own data ?
At this point is it also conjecture that China has fudged its numbers on an ongoing basis? Is there any evidence to support this claim? (Obviously they delayed initially telling everyone about the disease).
www.who.int/news-room/q-a-detail/q-a-similarities-and-differences-covid-19-and-influenzaAn old release but written with data at the time supplied by China , which most countries had been using for their initial response and reaction To covid 19 br] If China was found to purposefully under reported cases , what actions can the countries take that were using these flawed data ? Even all response times and incubation periods are still using Wuhan data on WHO site At what number of tests do countries start using their own data ? At this point is it also conjecture that China has fudged its numbers on an ongoing basis? Is there any evidence to support this claim? (Obviously they delayed initially telling everyone about the disease).
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tab1
Full Member
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September 2011
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Apr 3, 2020 13:11:50 GMT 1, Have not ruled out it can reoccur once infected and recovered or if mutations are present yet ?ย Should of released the statement after tests are concludedย otherwise the second wave or if mutations occur may be a lot worse to those out in publicย You keep referring to this new mutation that would be more harmful to the public. Viruses are still subject to the same evolutionary pressures as everything else therefore theres absolutely no benefit for them to evolve to kill their hosts quickly therefore not having time to spread. Itโs quite likely it would evolve to become less deadly stated may and not kill?as more research is needed to study how the body immune system will react ? It is how the body reacts to cope with the infection which with not enough studies or testing carried out there is not enough understanding of covid 19 yet which all Scientific world study groupS have stated
With mild infections and recovery what tissue damage has occurred , how is the capacity of lung function compromised if re infected ?
www.immunology.org/public-information/bitesized-immunology/pathogens-and-disease/immune-responses-viruses
www.karger.com/Article/FullText/503030
www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-07190-7
Aim of a virus as you stated is to grow not kill , it is the bodies defences to a foreign cell that attacks and kills ,mutations effects how the body will adapt and what reactions it will produce that needs to be researched
Have not ruled out it can reoccur once infected and recovered or if mutations are present yet ?ย Should of released the statement after tests are concludedย otherwise the second wave or if mutations occur may be a lot worse to those out in publicย You keep referring to this new mutation that would be more harmful to the public. Viruses are still subject to the same evolutionary pressures as everything else therefore theres absolutely no benefit for them to evolve to kill their hosts quickly therefore not having time to spread. Itโs quite likely it would evolve to become less deadly stated may and not kill?as more research is needed to study how the body immune system will react ? It is how the body reacts to cope with the infection which with not enough studies or testing carried out there is not enough understanding of covid 19 yet which all Scientific world study groupS have stated With mild infections and recovery what tissue damage has occurred , how is the capacity of lung function compromised if re infected ? www.immunology.org/public-information/bitesized-immunology/pathogens-and-disease/immune-responses-viruseswww.karger.com/Article/FullText/503030www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-07190-7Aim of a virus as you stated is to grow not kill , it is the bodies defences to a foreign cell that attacks and kills ,mutations effects how the body will adapt and what reactions it will produce that needs to be researched
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tab1
Full Member
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September 2011
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Apr 3, 2020 13:18:30 GMT 1, www.who.int/news-room/q-a-detail/q-a-similarities-and-differences-covid-19-and-influenzaAn old release but written with data at the time supplied by China , which most countries had been using for their initial response and reaction To covid 19 br] If China was found to purposefully under reported cases , what actions can the countries take that were using these flawed data ? Even all response times and incubation periods are still using Wuhan data on WHO site At what number of tests do countries start using their own data ? At this point is it also conjecture that China has fudged its numbers on an ongoing basis? Is there any evidence to support this claim? (Obviously they delayed initially telling everyone about the disease). the delayed release of information has had a massive effect on the world ,at this stage could say all worlds data is not accurate as no regulatory body confirming , different procedures and tests used , differing amounts of tests to each country carried out on populations , ways covid 19 recording as a death etc Media Releases are assumptions based on countries modelling programs using their own countries Data and leaked government discussion memos to the press Real facts will not be made until 4-5 years Later ?
www.who.int/news-room/q-a-detail/q-a-similarities-and-differences-covid-19-and-influenzaAn old release but written with data at the time supplied by China , which most countries had been using for their initial response and reaction To covid 19 br] If China was found to purposefully under reported cases , what actions can the countries take that were using these flawed data ? Even all response times and incubation periods are still using Wuhan data on WHO site At what number of tests do countries start using their own data ? At this point is it also conjecture that China has fudged its numbers on an ongoing basis? Is there any evidence to support this claim? (Obviously they delayed initially telling everyone about the disease). the delayed release of information has had a massive effect on the world ,at this stage could say all worlds data is not accurate as no regulatory body confirming , different procedures and tests used , differing amounts of tests to each country carried out on populations , ways covid 19 recording as a death etc Media Releases are assumptions based on countries modelling programs using their own countries Data and leaked government discussion memos to the press Real facts will not be made until 4-5 years Later ?
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tab1
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September 2011
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tab1
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Daylight Robber
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Member is Online
August 2016
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by Daylight Robber on Apr 3, 2020 14:48:43 GMT 1, Just received a newsletter from The Queen's College, Oxford University.
Some relatively positive news. Oxford has started early trials for a vaccine and they're hopeful of starting human trials, possibly as early as May. They suggest it may be available by the end of the year.
For reference, Oxford were at the forefront of developing leading vaccines for Ebola and MERS.
In regards to engineering, a collaboration between Oxfordโs Department of Engineering Science, Oxford University Hospitals, Kingโs College London, and the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences are working on Oxvent - a simplified but effective ventilator that can be produced in its thousands per week.
The device is described as like IKEA furniture โ it can be assembled in your front room with minimal tools. It's simple, but it will keep you alive.โ
Just received a newsletter from The Queen's College, Oxford University.
Some relatively positive news. Oxford has started early trials for a vaccine and they're hopeful of starting human trials, possibly as early as May. They suggest it may be available by the end of the year.
For reference, Oxford were at the forefront of developing leading vaccines for Ebola and MERS.
In regards to engineering, a collaboration between Oxfordโs Department of Engineering Science, Oxford University Hospitals, Kingโs College London, and the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences are working on Oxvent - a simplified but effective ventilator that can be produced in its thousands per week.
The device is described as like IKEA furniture โ it can be assembled in your front room with minimal tools. It's simple, but it will keep you alive.โ
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mw
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 186
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September 2019
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by mw on Apr 3, 2020 15:25:21 GMT 1, ย That is what I suspect to be the reason for Sweden not having a lock down. Civil unrest by certain sections of society. ย Some French politicians have also said that they want some zones in Paris to be exempt from lock down. The politicians did say migrant zones (their words not mine), to prevent unrest. ย Some factions are anxious to create unrest it seems. ย There is all ready unrest in France where in some towns cars set on fire and the police called out and once the police get there they are attacked by people throwing rocks and stuff. ย ย In the UK I think it is more a case of if people are not tested and if healthy allowed to work. The whole country could be in lock down for three months and thousands will lose their lively hoods, mall businesses and jobs and the economy and people might not recover for a long time. The Mayor of New York proposed the same thing the other week, that people are tested and healthy people allowed to go to work. Someone had previously posted the below link giving the explanation that Sweden is in lockdown, its just that they have a โhigh trust societyโ, so they dont been to force people to stay at home. They just ask people to do things for the greater good and they all conply (fancy that). The article also indicates that Sweden has a separation between the health ministry and politicians, so there is no political thinking needed when considering the advice of the health ministry. If the experts say measures are needed then everyone follows. This creates a stressful situation for the health ministry because people trust them and that trust requires the ministry to deliver on its end. foreignpolicy.com/2020/03/24/sweden-coronavirus-open-for-business/
Sweden also only has a population of about 10m, a land mass more than 3 times the size of England and a rather good health service, therefore they can let Covid19 run through the healthy population to an extent without fear of touching full capacity.
The Swedes love to travel so they'll all get their Coronapassports and be able to spend the winter on some nice, quiet beaches in Thailand.
ย That is what I suspect to be the reason for Sweden not having a lock down. Civil unrest by certain sections of society. ย Some French politicians have also said that they want some zones in Paris to be exempt from lock down. The politicians did say migrant zones (their words not mine), to prevent unrest. ย Some factions are anxious to create unrest it seems. ย There is all ready unrest in France where in some towns cars set on fire and the police called out and once the police get there they are attacked by people throwing rocks and stuff. ย ย In the UK I think it is more a case of if people are not tested and if healthy allowed to work. The whole country could be in lock down for three months and thousands will lose their lively hoods, mall businesses and jobs and the economy and people might not recover for a long time. The Mayor of New York proposed the same thing the other week, that people are tested and healthy people allowed to go to work. Someone had previously posted the below link giving the explanation that Sweden is in lockdown, its just that they have a โhigh trust societyโ, so they dont been to force people to stay at home. They just ask people to do things for the greater good and they all conply (fancy that). The article also indicates that Sweden has a separation between the health ministry and politicians, so there is no political thinking needed when considering the advice of the health ministry. If the experts say measures are needed then everyone follows. This creates a stressful situation for the health ministry because people trust them and that trust requires the ministry to deliver on its end. foreignpolicy.com/2020/03/24/sweden-coronavirus-open-for-business/Sweden also only has a population of about 10m, a land mass more than 3 times the size of England and a rather good health service, therefore they can let Covid19 run through the healthy population to an extent without fear of touching full capacity. The Swedes love to travel so they'll all get their Coronapassports and be able to spend the winter on some nice, quiet beaches in Thailand.
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pellets
New Member
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October 2018
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Poster Bob
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 5,884
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September 2013
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by Poster Bob on Apr 3, 2020 15:45:34 GMT 1, Land mass doesn't mean much when populations are concentrated in the major cities of which there are few. Their population densities within those cities are probably less than other European capitals, but that is just guesswork on my side.
We should see the same thing happen there that has elsewhere in Europe when governments failed to act: a high number of infections which overwhelms the health service once they've become sufficiently high in number and the symptoms sufficiently severe.
I have not heard a single epidemiologist say that what they're doing is prudent. They all say that social distancing is the best preventive measure available in the absence of effective treatment and a vaccine.
Someone had previously posted the below link giving the explanation that Sweden is in lockdown, its just that they have a โhigh trust societyโ, so they dont been to force people to stay at home. They just ask people to do things for the greater good and they all conply (fancy that). The article also indicates that Sweden has a separation between the health ministry and politicians, so there is no political thinking needed when considering the advice of the health ministry. If the experts say measures are needed then everyone follows. This creates a stressful situation for the health ministry because people trust them and that trust requires the ministry to deliver on its end. foreignpolicy.com/2020/03/24/sweden-coronavirus-open-for-business/Sweden also only has a population of about 10m, a land mass more than 3 times the size of England and a rather good health service, therefore they can let Covid19 run through the healthy population to an extent without fear of touching full capacity. The Swedes love to travel so they'll all get their Coronapassports and be able to spend the winter on some nice, quiet beaches in Thailand.
Land mass doesn't mean much when populations are concentrated in the major cities of which there are few. Their population densities within those cities are probably less than other European capitals, but that is just guesswork on my side. We should see the same thing happen there that has elsewhere in Europe when governments failed to act: a high number of infections which overwhelms the health service once they've become sufficiently high in number and the symptoms sufficiently severe. I have not heard a single epidemiologist say that what they're doing is prudent. They all say that social distancing is the best preventive measure available in the absence of effective treatment and a vaccine. Someone had previously posted the below link giving the explanation that Sweden is in lockdown, its just that they have a โhigh trust societyโ, so they dont been to force people to stay at home. They just ask people to do things for the greater good and they all conply (fancy that). The article also indicates that Sweden has a separation between the health ministry and politicians, so there is no political thinking needed when considering the advice of the health ministry. If the experts say measures are needed then everyone follows. This creates a stressful situation for the health ministry because people trust them and that trust requires the ministry to deliver on its end. foreignpolicy.com/2020/03/24/sweden-coronavirus-open-for-business/Sweden also only has a population of about 10m, a land mass more than 3 times the size of England and a rather good health service, therefore they can let Covid19 run through the healthy population to an extent without fear of touching full capacity. The Swedes love to travel so they'll all get their Coronapassports and be able to spend the winter on some nice, quiet beaches in Thailand.
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mw
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 186
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September 2019
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by mw on Apr 3, 2020 16:03:19 GMT 1, Land mass doesn't mean much when populations are concentrated in the major cities of which there are few. Their population densities within those cities are probably less than other European capitals, but that is just guesswork on my side. We should see the same thing happen there that has elsewhere in Europe when governments failed to act: a high number of infections which overwhelms the health service once they've become sufficiently high in number and the symptoms sufficiently severe. I have not heard a single epidemiologist say that what they're doing is prudent. They all say that social distancing is the best preventive measure available in the absence of effective treatment and a vaccine. Sweden also only has a population of about 10m, a land mass more than 3 times the size of England and a rather good health service, therefore they can let Covid19 run through the healthy population to an extent without fear of touching full capacity. The Swedes love to travel so they'll all get their Coronapassports and be able to spend the winter on some nice, quiet beaches in Thailand. www.theguardian.com/world/2020/mar/30/catastrophe-sweden-coronavirus-stoicism-lockdown-europe
Unrest at the stance is definitely on the up.
Obviously we don't know their modelling, but maybe they are hoping to get this thing done in one peak.
Land mass doesn't mean much when populations are concentrated in the major cities of which there are few. Their population densities within those cities are probably less than other European capitals, but that is just guesswork on my side. We should see the same thing happen there that has elsewhere in Europe when governments failed to act: a high number of infections which overwhelms the health service once they've become sufficiently high in number and the symptoms sufficiently severe. I have not heard a single epidemiologist say that what they're doing is prudent. They all say that social distancing is the best preventive measure available in the absence of effective treatment and a vaccine. Sweden also only has a population of about 10m, a land mass more than 3 times the size of England and a rather good health service, therefore they can let Covid19 run through the healthy population to an extent without fear of touching full capacity. The Swedes love to travel so they'll all get their Coronapassports and be able to spend the winter on some nice, quiet beaches in Thailand. www.theguardian.com/world/2020/mar/30/catastrophe-sweden-coronavirus-stoicism-lockdown-europeUnrest at the stance is definitely on the up. Obviously we don't know their modelling, but maybe they are hoping to get this thing done in one peak.
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Poster Bob
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 5,884
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September 2013
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by Poster Bob on Apr 3, 2020 16:19:24 GMT 1, My point is that we don't need to know it. All of the experts agree on the one tactic that is currently working. To diverge from that advice is a very bold move that I can't see working. Hopefully I'm wrong. That said, I cannot help to think that the Scandinavian mindset of a natural path to death is part of the reasoning for the decision they've made. Although, that doesn't align with the decisions that Denmark and Norway have made.
Land mass doesn't mean much when populations are concentrated in the major cities of which there are few. Their population densities within those cities are probably less than other European capitals, but that is just guesswork on my side. We should see the same thing happen there that has elsewhere in Europe when governments failed to act: a high number of infections which overwhelms the health service once they've become sufficiently high in number and the symptoms sufficiently severe. I have not heard a single epidemiologist say that what they're doing is prudent. They all say that social distancing is the best preventive measure available in the absence of effective treatment and a vaccine. www.theguardian.com/world/2020/mar/30/catastrophe-sweden-coronavirus-stoicism-lockdown-europeUnrest at the stance is definitely on the up. Obviously we don't know their modelling, but maybe they are hoping to get this thing done in one peak.
My point is that we don't need to know it. All of the experts agree on the one tactic that is currently working. To diverge from that advice is a very bold move that I can't see working. Hopefully I'm wrong. That said, I cannot help to think that the Scandinavian mindset of a natural path to death is part of the reasoning for the decision they've made. Although, that doesn't align with the decisions that Denmark and Norway have made. Land mass doesn't mean much when populations are concentrated in the major cities of which there are few. Their population densities within those cities are probably less than other European capitals, but that is just guesswork on my side. We should see the same thing happen there that has elsewhere in Europe when governments failed to act: a high number of infections which overwhelms the health service once they've become sufficiently high in number and the symptoms sufficiently severe. I have not heard a single epidemiologist say that what they're doing is prudent. They all say that social distancing is the best preventive measure available in the absence of effective treatment and a vaccine. www.theguardian.com/world/2020/mar/30/catastrophe-sweden-coronavirus-stoicism-lockdown-europeUnrest at the stance is definitely on the up. Obviously we don't know their modelling, but maybe they are hoping to get this thing done in one peak.
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tab1
Full Member
๐จ๏ธ 8,519
๐๐ป 3,679
September 2011
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Apr 3, 2020 16:31:38 GMT 1, Just received a newsletter from The Queen's College, Oxford University. Some relatively positive news. Oxford has started early trials for a vaccine and they're hopeful of starting human trials, possibly as early as May. They suggest it may be available by the end of the year. For reference, Oxford were at the forefront of developing leading vaccines for Ebola and MERS. In regards to engineering, a collaboration between Oxfordโs Department of Engineering Science, Oxford University Hospitals, Kingโs College London, and the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences are working on Oxvent - a simplified but effective ventilator that can be produced in its thousands per week. The device is described as like IKEA furniture โ it can be assembled in your front room with minimal tools. It's simple, but it will keep you alive.โ Positive yes but the NHS have stated they are having trouble logistically obtaining and keeping sufficient stocks of associated drugs and medicines / intreveneous supplies used in combination with treatment when using a ventillators , one part of the chain being met
think a few people may Be confused and assume a ventillator is the wonder cure once your hooked up you will be cured ...it is an assistance ,an aid to your compromised lungs to give you a fighting chance if your body is still strong enough
Just received a newsletter from The Queen's College, Oxford University. Some relatively positive news. Oxford has started early trials for a vaccine and they're hopeful of starting human trials, possibly as early as May. They suggest it may be available by the end of the year. For reference, Oxford were at the forefront of developing leading vaccines for Ebola and MERS. In regards to engineering, a collaboration between Oxfordโs Department of Engineering Science, Oxford University Hospitals, Kingโs College London, and the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences are working on Oxvent - a simplified but effective ventilator that can be produced in its thousands per week. The device is described as like IKEA furniture โ it can be assembled in your front room with minimal tools. It's simple, but it will keep you alive.โ Positive yes but the NHS have stated they are having trouble logistically obtaining and keeping sufficient stocks of associated drugs and medicines / intreveneous supplies used in combination with treatment when using a ventillators , one part of the chain being met think a few people may Be confused and assume a ventillator is the wonder cure once your hooked up you will be cured ...it is an assistance ,an aid to your compromised lungs to give you a fighting chance if your body is still strong enough
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mw
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 186
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September 2019
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by mw on Apr 3, 2020 16:38:24 GMT 1, Swedes are pretty teutonic in their thinking i find and I'm guessing they are thinking more long term in respect of having a greater percentage of the population with immunity.
Swedes are pretty teutonic in their thinking i find and I'm guessing they are thinking more long term in respect of having a greater percentage of the population with immunity.
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tab1
Full Member
๐จ๏ธ 8,519
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September 2011
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Apr 3, 2020 17:18:09 GMT 1, www.liveleak.com/view?t=slOPu_1585849082
How misinformation may happen on social media
The person may have a condition of OCD and/or autism , so may not be an deliberate act of menace
People process information in different ways
www.liveleak.com/view?t=slOPu_1585849082How misinformation may happen on social media The person may have a condition of OCD and/or autism , so may not be an deliberate act of menace People process information in different ways
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nobokov
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 4,948
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February 2016
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tab1
Full Member
๐จ๏ธ 8,519
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September 2011
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Apr 3, 2020 17:28:39 GMT 1, Watching the question time news , evasive with question of peak timings , can not have an idea with out real world figures with the whole population needed to be tested to get an more accurate idea and probable likely hood , working of predictability from mathematic models using data from overseas and small numbers on home ground at the moment is open to too many flaws which was shown recently when the government re adjusted calculations
Watching the question time news , evasive with question of peak timings , can not have an idea with out real world figures with the whole population needed to be tested to get an more accurate idea and probable likely hood , working of predictability from mathematic models using data from overseas and small numbers on home ground at the moment is open to too many flaws which was shown recently when the government re adjusted calculations
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irl1
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๐จ๏ธ 9,274
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December 2017
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by irl1 on Apr 4, 2020 0:37:27 GMT 1, COVID-19 CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC
Last updated: April 03, 2020, 23:27 GMT
Coronavirus Cases: 1,096,682
Deaths: 59,128
Recovered: 228,370
www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/
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Masong
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 2,223
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March 2017
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by Masong on Apr 4, 2020 1:41:32 GMT 1,
Mortality rate is clearly higher than youโre led to believe thatโs for sure.
Mortality rate is clearly higher than youโre led to believe thatโs for sure.
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tab1
Full Member
๐จ๏ธ 8,519
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September 2011
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by tab1 on Apr 4, 2020 1:59:14 GMT 1, Mortality rate is clearly higher than youโre led to believe thatโs for sure.
7.8billion people , 60k deaths , nothing to worry about
Mortality rate is clearly higher than youโre led to believe thatโs for sure. 7.8billion people , 60k deaths , nothing to worry about
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NYart
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,221
๐๐ป 844
January 2016
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by NYart on Apr 4, 2020 2:24:30 GMT 1, Mortality rate is clearly higher than youโre led to believe thatโs for sure.
Thereโs tons of undiagnosed cases though, so that also skews things greatly. It sounds like, of those tested positive about half are asymptomatic. How many additional are asymptomatic and positive but donโt have any reason to get tested? I donโt really think itโs a stretch to say thereโs 5-10x the amount of confirmed cases.
Mortality rate is clearly higher than youโre led to believe thatโs for sure. Thereโs tons of undiagnosed cases though, so that also skews things greatly. It sounds like, of those tested positive about half are asymptomatic. How many additional are asymptomatic and positive but donโt have any reason to get tested? I donโt really think itโs a stretch to say thereโs 5-10x the amount of confirmed cases.
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irl1
Full Member
๐จ๏ธ 9,274
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December 2017
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by irl1 on Apr 4, 2020 10:21:14 GMT 1, Mortality rate is clearly higher than youโre led to believe thatโs for sure. That's for sure. Still a long way to go with this.
Keep safe
Mortality rate is clearly higher than youโre led to believe thatโs for sure. That's for sure. Still a long way to go with this. Keep safe
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Leo Boyd
Artist
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,468
๐๐ป 2,072
June 2016
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Corona Virus effect on the art market?, by Leo Boyd on Apr 4, 2020 10:36:46 GMT 1, Someone sent me this via facebook. I have looked for the article it came from but can't find the english translation. But this is a good, interesting and pretty positive read.
Matthias Horx: "This is a historic moment"
"Nothing will be as before": futurologist Mattias Horx provides food for thought with his text about the time after this crisis.
I am often asked when Corona "will be over" and everything returns to normal. My answer: never. There are historical moments when the future changes direction. We call them bifurcations. Or deep crises. Such times are now.
The world as we know is dissolving. But behind it comes a new world, the formation of which we can at least imagine. For this I would like to offer you an exercise with which we have had good experiences in vision processes at companies. We call it the RE-Gnose. In contrast to the Prognose, we do not look "into the future" with this technique. But from the future BACK to today. Sounds crazy? Let's try it:
1. The re-gnosis: Our world in autumn 2020
Let's imagine a situation in autumn, let's say in September 2020. We're sitting in a street cafe in a big city. It is warm and people are moving on the street again. Do they move differently? Is everything the same as before? Does the wine, the cocktail, the coffee taste like it used to? Like before Corona? Or even better? Looking back, what will we be surprised about?
We will be surprised that the social constrains that we had to put ourselves through rarely lead to actual isolation. On the contrary. After the initial shock, many of us were even relieved that the many runs, talks and communications on multichannels suddenly came to a stop. Waiver does not necessarily mean loss, but it can actually open up new possibilities. Some have already experienced this, for example by trying interval fasting - and then suddenly the food tasted better. Paradoxically, the physical distance that the virus forced onto us created new closeness. We contacted with old friends more often, strengthened ties that had become loose. Families, neighbors, friends got closer and sometimes even solved hidden conflicts.
The social courtesy and mutual respect that we previously increasingly missed, made a comeback.
Now, in autumn 2020, there is a completely different mood at football games than in spring when there was a lot of mass rage. We wonder why this is so.
We are to be amazed by how quickly cultural techniques of the digital world have proven themselves in practice. Teleconferencing and videoconferencing, which most colleagues had always resisted (while the business-flying was preferred), turned out to be quite practical and productive. Teachers learned a lot about internet teaching. Home-office became a natural course for many - along with the improvisation and time juggling that goes with it.
At the same time, apparently outdated cultural techniques experienced a renaissance. Suddenly when you called you got not only the answering machine, but real people. The virus spawned a new culture of long phone calls without a second screen. The "messages" themselves suddenly took on a new meaning. You really communicated again. No one was allowed to wriggle anymore. Nobody was held out anymore. This created a new culture of accessibility. Of commitment.
People who never before came to rest because of the hectic pace, including young people, started going for long walks (a word that was previously unfamiliar to many). Reading books suddenly became a cult.
Reality shows suddenly seemed awkward. The whole trivia trash, the infinite soul garbage that flowed through all channels. No, it didn't completely disappear. But it was rapidly losing value. Can anyone remember the political correctness dispute? The infinite number of cultural wars about ... what was it all about?
Crises work primarily by dissolving old phenomena, making them superfluous ... Cynicism, this casual way of keeping the world off by devaluation, was suddenly abundant. The excessive fear-hysteria in the media was limited after a short first outbreak.
We will be surprised that already by summertime the medications needed to increase survival rate were found. This lowered the death rate and Corona became a virus that we just have to deal with - much like the flu and many other diseases. Medical progress helped. But we also learned that the decisive factor was not so much the technology, but the change in social behavior. The decisive factor was that people could remain solidary and constructive despite radical restrictions. Human-social intelligence has helped. The much-praised artificial intelligence however, which was known to be able to solve everything, has only had a limited impact on the Corona Crises.
This has shifted the relationship between technology and culture. Before the crisis, technology seemed to be the panacea, the bearer of all utopias. No one - or only a few hard-headed people - still believe in great digital redemption today. The big technology hype is over. We are again turning our attention to the humane questions: What is man? What are we for each other?
We are astonished to see how much humor and humanity actually emerged in the days of the virus.
We will be amazed at how far the economy could shrink without something like "collapse" actually happening, which was invoked before every little tax increase and every government intervention. Although there was a "black April", a deep economic downturn and a 50% stock market fall, even though many companies went bankrupt, shrank or mutated into something completely different, zero never came. As if economy were a breathing being that can also doze or sleep and even dream.
Today in the fall, there is a global economy again. But global just-in-time production, with huge branched value chains, in which millions of individual parts are carted across the planet, has survived. It is currently being dismantled and reconfigured. Interim storage facilities, depots and reserves are growing again everywhere in the productions and service facilities. Local productions are booming, networks are being localized, and crafts are experiencing a renaissance. The global system is drifting towards globalization: localization of the global.
We will be surprised that even the loss of assets due to the stock market crash does not hurt as much as it seemed in the beginning. In the new world, wealth suddenly no longer plays the decisive role. Good neighbors and a blossoming vegetable garden are more important.
Could it be that the virus has changed our course in the direction that it wanted to be changed anyway?
2. Re-gnose: coping with the present through a leap into the future
Why does this kind of โfrom the front backwardsโ scenario seems so irritatingly different from a classic forecast? It is because of the specific properties of our future sense. When we look "into the future", we mostly only see the dangers and problems "coming up", which pile up to insurmountable barriers. Like a locomotive out of the tunnel that runs over us. This fear barrier separates us from the future. That's why horror futures are always the easiest to depict.
On the other hand, re-gnoses form a loop of knowledge, in which we include ourselves, our inner change, in the future calculation. We connect internally with the future, and this creates a bridge between today and tomorrow. A "Future Awareness" arises.
If you do it right, something like Future Intelligence is created. We are able to anticipate not only the external "events", but also the internal adaptations with which we interact with a changed world.
It is therefore very different from a forecast that always has something dead, sterile in its apodictic character. We leave the stiffness of fear and return to the vitality that truly belongs to every future.
We all know that feeling of successfully overcoming fear. When we go to the dentist for treatment, we are worried long in advance. We lose control on the dentist's chair and it hurts before the procedure even started. In anticipating this feeling, we build up fears that can completely overwhelm us. However, once we have survived the procedure, there is a feeling of coping: the world looks young and fresh again and we are suddenly full of drive. Neurobiologically, the fear hormone Adrenaline is replaced by Dopamine, a type of endogenous drug for the future. While Adrenaline leads us to flee or fight (which is not really productive in the dentist's chair, nor in the fight against Corona), Dopamine opens our brain synapses: we are excited about what is to come, curious, foresighted. When we have a healthy Dopamine level, we make plans, we have visions that lead us to a forward-looking attitude.
Surprisingly, many experience exactly this in the Corona crisis. A massive loss of control suddenly turns into a veritable intoxication of the positive. After a period of bewilderment and fear, an inner strength arises. The world "ends", but if we are to still be there, a kind of new-being arises from inside. In the middle of civilization's shutdown, we walk through forests or parks, or across almost empty spaces. But this is not an apocalypse, but a new beginning.
This is how it manifests: Change begins as a changed pattern of expectations, perceptions and world connections. Sometimes it is precisely the break with the routines, the familiar, that releases our sense of the future again. The idea and certainty that everything could be completely different - even for the better.
We may even be surprised that Trump will be voted out of office in November. [...] The Corona crisis made it clear that those who want to incite people against each other have no real contribution to questions about the future. When things get serious, the destructive that lives in populism becomes clear.
Politics in its original sense as the formation of social responsibilities got within this crisis a new credibility, a new legitimacy. Precisely because it had to act "authoritarian", politics created trust in society. Science also experienced an astonishing renaissance in the probation crisis. Virologists and epidemiologists became media stars, but also "futuristic" philosophers, sociologists, psychologists, anthropologists, who were previously on the sidelines of the polarized debates, regained their voice and weight.
Fake news, however, rapidly lost market value. Conspiracy theories also suddenly looked like rotten goods, even though they were desperately offered.
3. A virus as an accelerator of evolution
Deep crises also point to another basic principle of change: the trend-countertrend synthesis.
The new world after Corona - or better with Corona - arises from the disruption of the megatrend of connectivity. Politically and economically this phenomenon is also called "globalization". The interruption of connectivity - through border closings, separations, foreclosures, quarantines - does not lead to the abolition of connections. But to reorganize the connectomes that hold our world together and carry it into the future. There is a developmental phase in the socio-economic systems.
The world to come will appreciate distance again - and this will make for more qualitative closeness. Autonomy and dependency, opening and closing are to be rebalanced. This can make the world more complex, but also more stable. This transformation is mostly a blind evolutionary process - because one fails, a new more adequate one prevails. This makes you dizzy at first, but then it shows its inner meaning: sustainability is what connects the paradoxes on a new level.
This process of complexation - not to be confused with complication - can also be consciously designed by people. Those who can, who speak the language of the coming complexity, will be the leaders of tomorrow. The hope-bearers. The future Gretas.
"Through Corona we will adapt our entire attitude towards life - in the sense of our existence as living beings in the midst of other forms of life." Slavo Zizek at the peak of the corona crisis in mid-March
Every deep crisis has a story, a narrative that resonates far into the future. One of the strongest visions left by the corona virus are the Italians making music on the balconies. The second vision is sent to us by satellite images that suddenly show the industrial areas of China and Italy free of smog. In 2020, human CO2 emissions will drop for the first time in history. That fact will do something to us. If the virus can do that - can we possibly do it too? Maybe the virus was just a messenger from the future. His drastic message is: Human civilization has become too dense, too fast, overheated. It is racing too much in a direction in which there is no future.
But it can reinvent itself. System reset. Cool down! Music on the balconies! This is how the future works.
Someone sent me this via facebook. I have looked for the article it came from but can't find the english translation. But this is a good, interesting and pretty positive read.
Matthias Horx: "This is a historic moment"
"Nothing will be as before": futurologist Mattias Horx provides food for thought with his text about the time after this crisis.
I am often asked when Corona "will be over" and everything returns to normal. My answer: never. There are historical moments when the future changes direction. We call them bifurcations. Or deep crises. Such times are now.
The world as we know is dissolving. But behind it comes a new world, the formation of which we can at least imagine. For this I would like to offer you an exercise with which we have had good experiences in vision processes at companies. We call it the RE-Gnose. In contrast to the Prognose, we do not look "into the future" with this technique. But from the future BACK to today. Sounds crazy? Let's try it:
1. The re-gnosis: Our world in autumn 2020
Let's imagine a situation in autumn, let's say in September 2020. We're sitting in a street cafe in a big city. It is warm and people are moving on the street again. Do they move differently? Is everything the same as before? Does the wine, the cocktail, the coffee taste like it used to? Like before Corona? Or even better? Looking back, what will we be surprised about?
We will be surprised that the social constrains that we had to put ourselves through rarely lead to actual isolation. On the contrary. After the initial shock, many of us were even relieved that the many runs, talks and communications on multichannels suddenly came to a stop. Waiver does not necessarily mean loss, but it can actually open up new possibilities. Some have already experienced this, for example by trying interval fasting - and then suddenly the food tasted better. Paradoxically, the physical distance that the virus forced onto us created new closeness. We contacted with old friends more often, strengthened ties that had become loose. Families, neighbors, friends got closer and sometimes even solved hidden conflicts.
The social courtesy and mutual respect that we previously increasingly missed, made a comeback.
Now, in autumn 2020, there is a completely different mood at football games than in spring when there was a lot of mass rage. We wonder why this is so.
We are to be amazed by how quickly cultural techniques of the digital world have proven themselves in practice. Teleconferencing and videoconferencing, which most colleagues had always resisted (while the business-flying was preferred), turned out to be quite practical and productive. Teachers learned a lot about internet teaching. Home-office became a natural course for many - along with the improvisation and time juggling that goes with it.
At the same time, apparently outdated cultural techniques experienced a renaissance. Suddenly when you called you got not only the answering machine, but real people. The virus spawned a new culture of long phone calls without a second screen. The "messages" themselves suddenly took on a new meaning. You really communicated again. No one was allowed to wriggle anymore. Nobody was held out anymore. This created a new culture of accessibility. Of commitment.
People who never before came to rest because of the hectic pace, including young people, started going for long walks (a word that was previously unfamiliar to many). Reading books suddenly became a cult.
Reality shows suddenly seemed awkward. The whole trivia trash, the infinite soul garbage that flowed through all channels. No, it didn't completely disappear. But it was rapidly losing value. Can anyone remember the political correctness dispute? The infinite number of cultural wars about ... what was it all about?
Crises work primarily by dissolving old phenomena, making them superfluous ... Cynicism, this casual way of keeping the world off by devaluation, was suddenly abundant. The excessive fear-hysteria in the media was limited after a short first outbreak.
We will be surprised that already by summertime the medications needed to increase survival rate were found. This lowered the death rate and Corona became a virus that we just have to deal with - much like the flu and many other diseases. Medical progress helped. But we also learned that the decisive factor was not so much the technology, but the change in social behavior. The decisive factor was that people could remain solidary and constructive despite radical restrictions. Human-social intelligence has helped. The much-praised artificial intelligence however, which was known to be able to solve everything, has only had a limited impact on the Corona Crises.
This has shifted the relationship between technology and culture. Before the crisis, technology seemed to be the panacea, the bearer of all utopias. No one - or only a few hard-headed people - still believe in great digital redemption today. The big technology hype is over. We are again turning our attention to the humane questions: What is man? What are we for each other?
We are astonished to see how much humor and humanity actually emerged in the days of the virus.
We will be amazed at how far the economy could shrink without something like "collapse" actually happening, which was invoked before every little tax increase and every government intervention. Although there was a "black April", a deep economic downturn and a 50% stock market fall, even though many companies went bankrupt, shrank or mutated into something completely different, zero never came. As if economy were a breathing being that can also doze or sleep and even dream.
Today in the fall, there is a global economy again. But global just-in-time production, with huge branched value chains, in which millions of individual parts are carted across the planet, has survived. It is currently being dismantled and reconfigured. Interim storage facilities, depots and reserves are growing again everywhere in the productions and service facilities. Local productions are booming, networks are being localized, and crafts are experiencing a renaissance. The global system is drifting towards globalization: localization of the global.
We will be surprised that even the loss of assets due to the stock market crash does not hurt as much as it seemed in the beginning. In the new world, wealth suddenly no longer plays the decisive role. Good neighbors and a blossoming vegetable garden are more important.
Could it be that the virus has changed our course in the direction that it wanted to be changed anyway?
2. Re-gnose: coping with the present through a leap into the future
Why does this kind of โfrom the front backwardsโ scenario seems so irritatingly different from a classic forecast? It is because of the specific properties of our future sense. When we look "into the future", we mostly only see the dangers and problems "coming up", which pile up to insurmountable barriers. Like a locomotive out of the tunnel that runs over us. This fear barrier separates us from the future. That's why horror futures are always the easiest to depict.
On the other hand, re-gnoses form a loop of knowledge, in which we include ourselves, our inner change, in the future calculation. We connect internally with the future, and this creates a bridge between today and tomorrow. A "Future Awareness" arises.
If you do it right, something like Future Intelligence is created. We are able to anticipate not only the external "events", but also the internal adaptations with which we interact with a changed world.
It is therefore very different from a forecast that always has something dead, sterile in its apodictic character. We leave the stiffness of fear and return to the vitality that truly belongs to every future.
We all know that feeling of successfully overcoming fear. When we go to the dentist for treatment, we are worried long in advance. We lose control on the dentist's chair and it hurts before the procedure even started. In anticipating this feeling, we build up fears that can completely overwhelm us. However, once we have survived the procedure, there is a feeling of coping: the world looks young and fresh again and we are suddenly full of drive. Neurobiologically, the fear hormone Adrenaline is replaced by Dopamine, a type of endogenous drug for the future. While Adrenaline leads us to flee or fight (which is not really productive in the dentist's chair, nor in the fight against Corona), Dopamine opens our brain synapses: we are excited about what is to come, curious, foresighted. When we have a healthy Dopamine level, we make plans, we have visions that lead us to a forward-looking attitude.
Surprisingly, many experience exactly this in the Corona crisis. A massive loss of control suddenly turns into a veritable intoxication of the positive. After a period of bewilderment and fear, an inner strength arises. The world "ends", but if we are to still be there, a kind of new-being arises from inside. In the middle of civilization's shutdown, we walk through forests or parks, or across almost empty spaces. But this is not an apocalypse, but a new beginning.
This is how it manifests: Change begins as a changed pattern of expectations, perceptions and world connections. Sometimes it is precisely the break with the routines, the familiar, that releases our sense of the future again. The idea and certainty that everything could be completely different - even for the better.
We may even be surprised that Trump will be voted out of office in November. [...] The Corona crisis made it clear that those who want to incite people against each other have no real contribution to questions about the future. When things get serious, the destructive that lives in populism becomes clear.
Politics in its original sense as the formation of social responsibilities got within this crisis a new credibility, a new legitimacy. Precisely because it had to act "authoritarian", politics created trust in society. Science also experienced an astonishing renaissance in the probation crisis. Virologists and epidemiologists became media stars, but also "futuristic" philosophers, sociologists, psychologists, anthropologists, who were previously on the sidelines of the polarized debates, regained their voice and weight.
Fake news, however, rapidly lost market value. Conspiracy theories also suddenly looked like rotten goods, even though they were desperately offered.
3. A virus as an accelerator of evolution
Deep crises also point to another basic principle of change: the trend-countertrend synthesis.
The new world after Corona - or better with Corona - arises from the disruption of the megatrend of connectivity. Politically and economically this phenomenon is also called "globalization". The interruption of connectivity - through border closings, separations, foreclosures, quarantines - does not lead to the abolition of connections. But to reorganize the connectomes that hold our world together and carry it into the future. There is a developmental phase in the socio-economic systems.
The world to come will appreciate distance again - and this will make for more qualitative closeness. Autonomy and dependency, opening and closing are to be rebalanced. This can make the world more complex, but also more stable. This transformation is mostly a blind evolutionary process - because one fails, a new more adequate one prevails. This makes you dizzy at first, but then it shows its inner meaning: sustainability is what connects the paradoxes on a new level.
This process of complexation - not to be confused with complication - can also be consciously designed by people. Those who can, who speak the language of the coming complexity, will be the leaders of tomorrow. The hope-bearers. The future Gretas.
"Through Corona we will adapt our entire attitude towards life - in the sense of our existence as living beings in the midst of other forms of life." Slavo Zizek at the peak of the corona crisis in mid-March
Every deep crisis has a story, a narrative that resonates far into the future. One of the strongest visions left by the corona virus are the Italians making music on the balconies. The second vision is sent to us by satellite images that suddenly show the industrial areas of China and Italy free of smog. In 2020, human CO2 emissions will drop for the first time in history. That fact will do something to us. If the virus can do that - can we possibly do it too? Maybe the virus was just a messenger from the future. His drastic message is: Human civilization has become too dense, too fast, overheated. It is racing too much in a direction in which there is no future.
But it can reinvent itself. System reset. Cool down! Music on the balconies! This is how the future works.
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