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Why is there something rather than nothing? Baudrillard and the Disappearance of Being

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La grande question philosophique était : « Pourquoi y a-t-il quelque chose plutôt que rien ? ». Aujourd’hui, la véritable question est : « Pourquoi y a-t-il rien plutôt que quelque chose ? ». J. Baudrillard Framing the Question The most persistent question in Western metaphysics has a deceptively simple form: Why is there something rather than nothing? Associated with Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and later reactivated with new urgency by Martin Heidegger in Being and Time, this question appears to anchor philosophy in its most fundamental concern: the intelligibility of existence itself. It presupposes that “something” is given, stable, and in need of grounding. Philosophy, in this sense, becomes the effort to account for presence. Yet what if this question no longer holds? What if its very structure presupposes a world that no longer exists? This essay argues that Jean Baudrillard does not simply respond to metaphysics but displaces its very horizon. In his notion of the “perfect ...

The Crime Has Already Happened

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"Ceci est l’histoire d’un crime — du meurtre de la réalité. Et de l’extermination d’une illusion — l’illusion vitale, l’illusion radicale du monde. Le réel ne disparaît pas dans l’illusion, c’est l’illusion qui disparaît dans la réalité intégrale". J. Baudrillard The Silence After the Act Reality has already been murdered. No one witnessed it. There was no noise, no rupture, nothing that could be clearly identified as an event. No body, no weapon, no scene to secure. And yet something has shifted. The world moves too smoothly, responds too quickly, reflects us too perfectly. Resistance has thinned out. Even what appears to stand apart is already integrated. This is not progress. It is the silence that follows an act carried out without error. We tend to imagine catastrophe as something visible—collapse, explosion, breakdown. But the decisive break may not announce itself at all. It may take the form of an erasure so complete that nothing remains to mark it. Jean Ba...

From Self-Overcoming to Self-Replication: The Perfect Crime Against the Human

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How Humanity Is Deleting Itself Scroll. Generate. Optimize. Humanity is not evolving, it is perfecting the conditions of its own disappearance. A face refined by filters, a line shaped by predictive systems, a life translated into data points. Nothing here feels catastrophic. On the contrary, it appears efficient, frictionless, even liberating. And yet this is precisely the problem. The most celebrated achievements of our time do not expand human potential, they render it unnecessary. Jean Baudrillard called this the “perfect crime”: the murder of reality that leaves no trace. Decades earlier, Friedrich Nietzsche warned of a different danger—not collapse, but the flattening of existence into comfort, repetition, and triviality. Read together, they form not a theory but a diagnosis. Humanity is not advancing beyond itself. It is dissolving—smoothly, efficiently, without resistance—into the systems it has built. Nietzsche’s Fork in the Road Nietzsche offers no stable ground...

Method in the Madness: The Logic of Indeterminacy in Post-Structuralism

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The Globe. AI image Introduction — Is There Method in the Madness? “Though this be madness, yet there is method in’t.” The line, spoken by Polonius in Hamlet, captures a paradox that extends well beyond the stage. It proves especially suggestive when approaching post-structuralist writing, which often appears, at first encounter, disordered, playful, even erratic. Readers of Jacques Derrida or Michel Foucault frequently describe a sense of instability: meanings shift, arguments double back, and clarity seems continually deferred. This first impression, however, can be misleading. What looks like looseness is often the product of careful construction. These texts are not casual or improvised; they are highly deliberate. The real question, then, is not whether method is present, but why such disciplined procedures are used to produce instability. If meaning cannot settle, why is the reasoning so exact? The Non-Finality Thesis Post-structuralist thought is commonly associated with...