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Being-in-the COVID-19-world: Existence, technology and embodiment


A.H. Verhoef
J. du Toit
P. du Preez

Abstract

The multifaceted nature of COVID-19 permeates all dimensions of human life. In this article, we argue that the COVID-19 crisis might teach us something  about dealing with ruptures of this kind and scope in the future. The pandemic challenges our Being-in-the-world and it has the potential to help us  realise the authentic possibilities of our own being – a freedom we have in our being-towardsdeath. We contemplate the extent to which this pandemic has caused existential angst and resultant reflection. To this end, we analyse, with reference to the work of Martin Heidegger, the existential and  technological challenges that accompany the pandemic. We postulate that the pandemic has forced us to think about our existence more authentically,  away from the “fallenness” of the ontological structure of Dasein in its everydayness. It proffers the opportunity to reconsider what authentic existence,  technology, and embodiment entail amidst COVID-19 and for the future.


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 2309-9089
print ISSN: 1015-8758