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From Memory to Mediation: Teaching Vocabulary in the Age of Cognitive Abundance

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Klassenzimmeransicht mit Trennwänden. AI image The Divider as Epistemology The vocabulary test is about to begin. A familiar tension settles in the room, a quiet tightening of attention that precedes evaluation. Before anything is written, the teacher moves between the rows, placing wooden dividers on each desk. The gesture is routine, almost administrative, yet it reorganizes the space entirely: students are now separated not only physically, but cognitively. No glance, no hesitation, no informal exchange is allowed to circulate. What is being staged here is more than an exam condition. It is a controlled reconstruction of isolation. For a brief moment, the classroom becomes a sealed cognitive environment in which external assistance is suspended. The underlying assumption is implicit but decisive: knowing a word means being able to retrieve it without mediation. Even this modest architectural intervention already carries a theory of knowledge within it. Knowledge as Internal ...

Beyond Marx: Baudrillard on Media, Signs, and Desire

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The Newsroom. AI image From Political Economy to Symbolic Consumption In classical Marxist theory, capitalism is understood primarily through production. Karl Marx examined labor, exploitation, commodities, and alienation in order to explain the functioning of industrial society. Yet for Jean Baudrillard, this framework no longer fully captures the logic of contemporary capitalism. Modern society is not organized solely around factories and labor relations; it increasingly operates through advertising, communication networks, images, and manufactured desire. Baudrillard argues that consumer culture transforms objects into signs. A phone, a car, or a luxury watch is not purchased merely for practical use; each item carries symbolic meaning. Commodities promise prestige, fulfillment, attractiveness, and belonging. People therefore consume not simply material goods, but coded representations of happiness and identity. In this sense, capitalism no longer depends exclusively on producti...

The Algorithmic Cargo Cult: Baudrillard, Desire, and the Signs of Happiness

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Lego Airplane: Waiting for Happiness to Land . AI image Thesis This article argues that Jean Baudrillard believed classical Marxism no longer adequately described late capitalist society because capitalism had shifted from the organization of production to the organization of consumption, signs, and desire. Using the anthropological metaphor of the cargo cult  ( le culte du cargo ) , Baudrillard shows how modern consumers surround themselves with signs of happiness while endlessly waiting for fulfillment that never fully arrives. In the digital era, this logic intensifies through algorithmic systems, social media, and the continuous circulation of symbolic lifestyles. Introduction Karl Marx understood capitalism primarily through production. Factories, labour, machinery, exploitation, and commodities formed the conceptual center of his critique. Alienation emerged because workers became separated from the products they created, from the labour process itself, and ultimate...