Post by account_disabled on Mar 6, 2024 15:53:03 GMT 10
That Annamaria Testa (Communication Expert) We can ask ourselves what is teaching us - and above all what is reminding us - of this issue of the Coronavirus, about our condition and our way of perceiving what is happening around us. I'm trying to list seven things. THE BUTTERFLY EFFECT Read also: Beware of colored toys! Doctor: They contain lead, harmful to health! ALARM/ There is a new variant of the coronavirus that is spreading rapidly In a complex system, a small change in initial conditions can have large consequences. It is the butterfly effect, poetically expressed in the early sixties by chaos theorists with the formula, "the flapping of a butterfly's wings in Brazil may be enough to cause a hurricane in Texas.
Thus, in a globalized, complex, interconnected Cambodia Telegram Number Data world, a less poetic coronavirus from the side of Wuhan, China, is enough to cause panic in financial markets, block a significant portion of international flights, slow the global economy, to mobilize governments in an optic of maximum risk reduction. And to capture the general attention, enough to overshadow even the depressing ending of the first season of the Brexit soap opera. Moreover, as "TIME" recalls, citing the McKinsey global institute, "the most populous country in the world is now an integral part of the global economy. It is the largest producer of goods. It imports more crude oil than any other country.
With 150 million outbound trips worth $277 billion in 2018, the Chinese top tourism spenders. And China is the world's largest market for many product categories, from cars to alcohol to the entire range of luxury goods." TIGHTLY CONNECTED We are all connected, and increasingly alike. As an extensive National Geographic article points out, from one end of the world to the other we dress more and more the same way, eat more and more similar things, love the same products, listen to the same music, share ( more or less) the same information. We infect each other, in a thousand ways.
Thus, in a globalized, complex, interconnected Cambodia Telegram Number Data world, a less poetic coronavirus from the side of Wuhan, China, is enough to cause panic in financial markets, block a significant portion of international flights, slow the global economy, to mobilize governments in an optic of maximum risk reduction. And to capture the general attention, enough to overshadow even the depressing ending of the first season of the Brexit soap opera. Moreover, as "TIME" recalls, citing the McKinsey global institute, "the most populous country in the world is now an integral part of the global economy. It is the largest producer of goods. It imports more crude oil than any other country.
With 150 million outbound trips worth $277 billion in 2018, the Chinese top tourism spenders. And China is the world's largest market for many product categories, from cars to alcohol to the entire range of luxury goods." TIGHTLY CONNECTED We are all connected, and increasingly alike. As an extensive National Geographic article points out, from one end of the world to the other we dress more and more the same way, eat more and more similar things, love the same products, listen to the same music, share ( more or less) the same information. We infect each other, in a thousand ways.