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The Steak of Lucidity: Cypher and the End of the Real

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I know the steak doesn’t exist. AI image The Steak Scene — Lucidity Without Refusal In one of the most memorable scenes of The Matrix , Cypher sits across from Agent Smith inside a simulated restaurant. The setting is refined, the atmosphere inviting, and the steak appears convincingly real. Cypher admits that he knows the food is illusory—and yet, he prefers it. This moment does more than stage a betrayal. It introduces a philosophical tension: what happens when knowledge of illusion no longer leads to refusal, but to complicity? Cypher’s confession disrupts the classical assumption that truth necessarily holds a higher value than appearance. The question that follows is more unsettling than the scene itself: If lucidity does not liberate, what does it do? Cypher — Desire and the Devaluation of the Real Cypher’s decision is often interpreted in moral terms—as weakness or corruption. Yet what matters is not its ethical status, but its structure. Within the world of the fi...

Capitalism Today: A System That Feeds on Its Critics

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Criticising the Wrong System We have never lacked critiques of capitalism. Inequality widens, crises recur, politics appears increasingly hollow—yet nothing fundamentally shifts. The language of critique is everywhere, from academic theory to social media, and still the system persists with remarkable stability. This raises a more unsettling possibility: the problem is not simply the system itself, but the way it is criticised. What if critique has become one of its most efficient operations? The persistence of capitalism may not be due to a failure of critique, but to its success—its integration into the very logic it claims to oppose. Marxism as Part of the Problem For over a century, Marxism has provided the dominant framework for analysing capitalism. Its central categories—production, labour, and value—organise critique around exploitation and material inequality. Capital extracts surplus value from labour; its contradictions generate crises; history advances through antag...

From Lack to Loop: Boredom, Desire, and Consumption in Late Capitalism

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Introduction: No Escape from Boredom There is a familiar motif in Romantic literature: the restless subject who travels in search of relief, only to discover that what he flees has accompanied him all along. Lord Byron gives this intuition a memorable form—one may cross borders and seas, yet the inner condition remains unchanged. In this sense, boredom appears less as a situational inconvenience than as a persistent feature of human existence. If this condition has always been with us, however, why does it feel so different today? Is it simply a timeless psychological state, or has it been reshaped by modern social and economic structures? This article argues that boredom is not an invention of capitalism, but neither is it untouched by it. What begins as an encounter with lack —articulated in different ways by Søren Kierkegaard and Jacques Lacan—is transformed, in late capitalist society, into a managed and monetized condition. Through the work of Henri Lefebvre, Jean Baudrillard,...

Universal Basic Income and the Transformation of Power: From Giving to Domination

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Introduction: The Return of an Old Idea Proposals to guarantee an income to all citizens have re-emerged across contemporary political debate, from European welfare reforms to discussions surrounding automation and precarious labor. Often framed as pragmatic responses to inequality, these measures—whether in the form of universal basic income or minimum income schemes—rearticulate an older policy model: the negative income tax . At first glance, such policies appear as humane correctives to market outcomes. Yet through the lens of Jean Baudrillard, they take on a more unsettling meaning. For Baudrillard, the negative income tax is not simply redistributive. It signals a transformation in the structure of power itself: a shift from extraction to unilateral provision, from exploitation to symbolic domination. This essay argues that Baudrillard’s critique reveals a paradox at the heart of contemporary welfare reform: the more the system appears to give, the more it may foreclose th...