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