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Affiliation(s)

Nova Univerza, Nova Gorica, Slovenija

ABSTRACT

This paper explores the concept of crisis from a critical and interdisciplinary perspective, arguing that many contemporary crises—such as the coronavirus crisis and the climate crisis—are socially constructed and misunderstood. Drawing from Thomas Kuhn’s paradigm shift theory, Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s Black Swan concept, and complexity science, it contends that crises are a normal part of systemic evolution rather than extraordinary disruptions. The paper critiques the shift in agency from individuals to macro-level institutions, which has led to crises being perceived as indefinite rather than finite. The work also examines how crises are often framed through memetics rather than physical reality. By analyzing historical and contemporary crises, the paper illustrates how crisis narratives shape societal behavior and policy. The role of antifragility, memetic warfare, and evolutionary stable strategies (ESS) is discussed, demonstrating how resilience emerges through localized, rather than globalized, responses. The study concludes by advocating for a shift away from progressivist macro-level interventions and toward individual agency as the fundamental unit of societal adaptation. This perspective reframes crises as necessary transitions within evolutionary progress, arguing that societal sustainability depends on decentralization and adaptation rather than centralized control and panic-driven reactions.

KEYWORDS

evolution, crisis, emergence, individual, society, memes, trauma

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