Heinrich Hoerle, 1930, Monument to the Unknown Prosthesis |
The COVID-19 crisis has brought into sharp focus modern man’s ideological belief that he has mastered science and medicine, and has so defeated—or at least delayed—the intrusions of the Grim Reaper. Our misplaced belief that medical science can cure any ailment means we want to try to save everyone—and when we cannot, there is dismay and fury.
What happens, then, when death becomes an inevitable choice? What if the choices set before us are choices which must choose death in any event?
Whilst the achievements of medical science cannot be overstated, and are undoubtedly impressive, our somewhat conceited overestimation of our ability to stave off death indefinitely has led us to a crossroads today which opens up the social, spiritual, and philosophical question of where to draw the line, who to try to save, and at what cost—if death is indeed inevitable.
At logical extremes, there are two distinct, divergent—apparently incompatible—viewpoints that could be held and debated. In the context of the coronavirus, or COVID-19:
• Firstly, that we should lockdown indefinitely, or until a treatment or vaccine is found, saving every life we can at any cost.There have of course been many pandemics, and COVID-19 is just be the latest contagion in a long line of similar illnesses that have ripped through the human population over the last hundred or so years—starting with the Spanish Flu in 1918, and continuously assaulting us before retreating and coming back again in different forms and kinds.
• Alternatively, when the cost becomes too high, to start trading the lives of the old and the sick for that of the starving young and poor.
There is a difference this time, however. The connected world and social media has allowed the world to track the progress of the disease and monitor its devastation, and the real-time outrage has been swift, palpable, and highly publicised.
A minister who has presided over countless funerals told me recently that there has been a perceptible change in the emotions expressed when family and friends come together to bury loved ones. The old markers of grief and the grieving process are replaced with anger and fury today.
But our fury has no object; it is just the way things work. There must be a middle road—to save who you can, but allow those whose time has come to leave. A realisation and philosophical embracing that our time on earth is finite, which in turn adds value to the little time we do have. To say goodbye without anger or pain or fury, because after all, shouldn’t your last memory of a departed one be tinged with memories and feelings of love, not hate?