CONCEPT
Nested Counterfactuals
The recursive structure of
The Man in the High Castle — an alternate-history novel containing a novel that describes a different alternate history — that
Dick used to destabilize the distinction between
actual and
counterfactual reality.
In
The Man in the High Castle (1962), Dick constructed a world where the Axis powers won World War II. Within this alternate reality, characters read a banned novel called
The Grasshopper Lies Heavy, which describes a world where the Allies won — a world that resembles our reality but is not identical to it. The nesting creates deliberate vertigo: readers of Dick's novel encounter characters reading a novel that describes something close to the reader's own world, and the entire structure suggests that every reality is someone else's counterfactual. Dick intensified this effect by using the I Ching to make plot decisions during composition — throwing coins, consulting hexagrams, and allowing an ancient randomization system to co-author the narrative. The method introduced contingency into the creative process, producing a novel that neither Dick's conscious intention alone nor the I Ching alone could have generated. The collaboration
between human judgment and oracular randomness produced Dick's most celebrated work.