Too Much Reality Can Kill: Baudrillard and the Collapse of Meaning
Introduction: The Paradox of Excess Reality is often thought to disappear when it is denied, distorted, or replaced by illusion. Yet in the opening chapter of The Intelligence of Evil or the Lucidity Pact , Jean Baudrillard proposes a more unsettling possibility: that reality collapses not from lack, but from excess. What he calls “Integral Reality” names a historical condition in which “everything becomes real, everything becomes visible and transparent, everything is ‘liberated’, everything comes to fruition and has a meaning” (Baudrillard, 2005, p. 17). At first glance, such a development might appear as the fulfillment of reason’s oldest ambitions, the complete unveiling of the world. Baudrillard’s claim, however, moves in the opposite direction. When reality is fully realized, it ceases to function as a principle of meaning. What emerges is not clarity, but saturation. This essay argues that Integral Reality marks the point at which the real becomes total, and that this totali...