The New Heresy: Baudrillard and the Taboo of Reality
Bûcher des vanités. AI art Introduction — When Questioning Becomes Transgression Critical thought once assumed that reality could be questioned. Philosophy, politics, and theory all relied on a minimal distance from the real, a space in which interrogation remained legitimate. One could challenge institutions, reinterpret events, or expose illusions without crossing a fundamental boundary. In the opening chapter of The Intelligence of Evil or the Lucidity Pact , Jean Baudrillard suggests that this space has collapsed. What once counted as critique now appears as transgression. Baudrillard’s discourse is scandalous not because it opposes the system, but because it violates a new taboo: the unquestionability of reality itself. Under what he calls “Integral Reality,” to question the real is no longer an intellectual act. It is treated as heresy. From Critique to Taboo There was a time when disagreement did not imply moral fault. To question truth claims was part of thought itsel...