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The dichotomy of control, ER edition

Figs in Winter
8 min readMar 4, 2022
[image: the author, in the ER of the Tisch Hospital run by NYU (left); view from said hospital (right)]

Pardon me the personal update, but the darn covid pandemic hasn’t been kind to my health, mental and otherwise. I have developed hypertension. One of my vertebral discs went out of alignment. I have put on weight, in part as a result of stress. And I’ve just spent three days in the Emergency Room of New York University’s Tisch Hospital, on Manhattan’s midtown east (highly recommended, by the way, if you are in the market for that sort of thing).

I understand that correlation does not imply causation — though the two are highly correlated, as my statistician friends say — and that therefore I cannot claim a causal link between the pandemic and my health issues. But it sure has been a difficult time. Then again, I have experienced nothing like what a lot of other people have been going through over the last two years, as I have an excellent and stable job, with a good health insurance. And of course it’s a whole different ballpark for the millions of people currently being affected by Adolf Putin.

Still, I have to deal with my own problems because, well, they’re my own! Which is why I am grateful to have been practicing Hellenistic philosophy for years now, mostly in the form of Stoicism, more recently in that of an eclectic type of Skepticism.

The reason for my gratitude is not just that studying (and practicing) Hellenistic…

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Figs in Winter
Figs in Winter

Written by Figs in Winter

by Massimo Pigliucci, a scientist, philosopher, and Professor at the City College of New York. Exploring and practicing Stoicism & other philosophies of life.

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