Living into uncertainty

“‘Lord keep us safe,’ she says. ‘God spare this place.'”
“Human beings want to feel that they are on a power walk into the future, when in fact we are always just tapping our canes on the pavement in the fog.” Writing just a few months into the pandemic, humanities professor Mark Lilla discussed how much we humans hate uncertainty and how desperately we want to be told what to do. On both counts, Lilla reminds us that, no matter how high the stakes may be, we’re stuck with not knowing: “The pandemic has brought home just how great a responsibility we bear toward the future, and also how inadequate our knowledge is for making wise decisions and anticipating consequences.” He counsels humility and greater acceptance of “the radical uncertainty in which we are always living.” Now, as we enter the pandemic’s third year, his words look more prescient than ever.

“No One Knows What’s Going to Happen: Stop asking pundits to predict the future after the coronavirus. It doesn’t exist,” by Mark Lilla, New York Times, May 22, 2020


Copyright 2022 Richard Smith