Simulations 6

The Orders of Simulacra Jean Baudrillard identified three orders of simulacra since Renaissance: counterfeit, production, simulation. In the first chapter, he wrote about the counterfeit(first) phase. The first order is "based on the natural law of value". The manipulations are mainly the reproductions of the originals, while they coexist at the same time. During theContinue reading "Simulations 6"

Simulations 5

Baudrillard introduced a concept called, implosion. He says when the opposite poles of “DNA” combine together, the subject and object collide, when cause and effect are merged, implosion happens. This activity blurs the boundary between real and hyperreal. To quote his sentence: “(…) hence into absolute manipulation--not passivity, but the non-distinction of active and passive.”Continue reading "Simulations 5"

Simulations 4 and little update

This chapter broadens the application of simulation to a larger environment and discusses the relationship between the law and crime, demands and production, the game of power… In my opinion, Baudrillard is a Nihilist. He believes everything is hyperreal and simulation. The hyperreal system conceals that there is nothing beneath. People working in a factoryContinue reading "Simulations 4 and little update"

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