Enchanted Simulation: Baudrillard, Nietzsche, Freud and the Uncanny Force of Illusion
A Lady’s Drawer, in John Haberle’s Style. AI image Thesis Trompe l’oeil reveals a central tension in Baudrillard’s thought: although simulation seeks to make the world fully visible and operational, seduction reintroduces illusion from within. Far from being the opposite of reality , illusion is one of its conditions. Nietzsche helps clarify this by showing that life depends on appearance and artistic force, while Freud helps explain why hyper-real images become uncanny precisely when they seem too real. Introduction In a culture saturated with images, reality seems increasingly transparent. Everything appears available to view, record, and reproduce. Yet certain images still fascinate us in a different way: they do not merely show the world, but unsettle our confidence in it. This is the paradox at the heart of Jean Baudrillard’s reflections on simulation and seduction . If simulation seeks to make everything visible and operational, seduction reintroduces ambiguity, appea...