Pellius,
These discussions remind me of what I experienced 40+ yrs ago when I was an undergrad sitting in a Philosophy class discussing Aristotle's and Plato's view on tragedy and how humans have an inherent need for pathos. I remember the constant waves of empty rhetoric coming from both opposing sides in trying to prove their point over the other. Everyone wore business casual to class back then, can you imagine?
Anyhow, I think everyone's unique experiences will determine their threshold for deeming an event a tragedy or not. In my earliest memories of childhood, I remember summers spent in Sderot Israel where bombs used to go off every so often and many lives were lost. The death of people from both sides was very sad. In New York City during the late 70s and 80s, I remember the days of the crack epidemic and seeing thousands of people dying. These types of events were tragedies for me, as it affected many people I knew and changed the landscape with regards to how people lived, but even then I moved on with my life. What these events shared in common was magnitude (it affected many people 100's-1000's), long-lasting effects (caused that part of Israel to enforce restrictive practices with regards to when people can be outside and increased military presence which took away from the beauty of the environment + the crack epidemic practically destroyed the overall look/feel of certain parts of NYC) and struck home (both instances affected people I directly knew, some friends and other acquaintances).
I think a tragedy is an event that will be uniquely perceived and your individual experiences will determine which events qualify. To someone that has left/loss a job a bunch of times, but always found a way to get right back up and land another job, losing a job isn't a tragedy. To someone else, who has never left or lost a job, getting fired can be a tragedy if they have a wife and kids depending on them and no way to pay their bills.
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