Differentiating Indifference: Baudrillard, Saussure, and the Persistence of Opposition
“Vive la différence !” AI art Introduction: A World Without Difference? In modern thought, meaning is often grounded in difference. From linguistics to philosophy, sense emerges not from isolated terms, but from relations that distinguish one element from another. Yet in the opening chapter of The Intelligence of Evil or the Lucidity Pact , Jean Baudrillard proposes a more unsettling scenario: a world in which distinctions no longer carry weight. What makes this diagnosis striking is that his text itself remains structured through a dense network of oppositions—real and imaginary, truth and verification, possibility and reality. The persistence of these contrasts raises an immediate question: how can a theory of indifference be articulated through difference? This essay argues that Baudrillard does not abandon oppositional thinking. He mobilizes it in order to expose its transformation. Distinctions remain in place, yet they no longer generate meaning. They are still visible,...