In an earlier post I made the observation that the novel coronavirus pandemic affected us singly and collectively across multiple dimensions. We must continue to explore those dimensions in order to understand and steer the world we live in and are now responsible for.
Besides Covid-19's direct impact on our lives, differing enormously depending on where we live and the resources available to each of us, it has affected the giant web of interconnectivity that has been constructed in the course of the Anthropocene.
That web is not equally strong in all directions but to a greater or lesser extent it both entraps and supports us all. If present trends continue it will get stronger over time with implications we struggle to understand, nevermind control.
One of the paradoxes of knowledge, maybe the chief one, is that as knowledge expands so does ignorance. At first glance one can visualise this as an expanding circle of knowledge bounded by the apparently infinite world of ignorance.
But maybe that is an inadequate metaphor. Perhaps it is more accurate to say we create islands of expanding knowledge within a world of infinite ignorance. Mostly the islands remain disconnected until linked by far-sighted humans. Some islands expand enormously while others remain relatively stunted.
These islands of externally acquired knowledge (and direct experience) are resident in each individual mind but differ enormously in size and content from one mind to another. We each contain our own archipelago of experience and knowledge Thus to use the metaphor in an undifferentiated global sense is an over simplification.