Member-only story

The Spreading Rate

julia hobsbawm
6 min readFeb 9, 2021

--

What disease tells us about how humans connect for good and ill

It is six years since I first began to write and talk about Social Health: how we connect in the digital age of complexity, and how we can stay human in the machine age.

I wanted to show that the way humans connect to each other resembles the way nature’s networks operate, with disease a useful if painful illustration of the strengths and weaknesses of the main artery of connection: Networks.

As I searched for a good case in point I researched extensively the Ebola pandemic of 2014. I was transfixed by the way in which this disease was cruelly spread by touch — the very essence of connection between humans.

Revisiting today what I first wrote in 2016 I’m struck by some similarities between what happened with the Ebola outbreak and what is happening now with Covid-19. Specifically, the way in which the spread of this virus is also in direct proportion to the intimacy with which we connect to each other: in the case of Covid-19 it is breath.

When we speak, sing, shout, we spread the virus. How cruel is that? How much does that cut to the heart of our social selves?

I am also struck afresh, re-reading the Ebola case study of 2014, of the way in which humans, and lawmakers in particular, struggle to contain — I use that word…

--

--

julia hobsbawm
julia hobsbawm

Written by julia hobsbawm

Writes and talks about the future of work, and achieving Social Health in organisations. Author of The Nowhere Office (also the podcast) www.juliahobsbawm.com

No responses yet