Baudrillard's five-century taxonomy of how representations evolve — from counterfeit that serves reality, to product equivalent to reality, to simulation that precedes and generates reality. The framework that makes AI legible as a civilizational event.
Baudrillard's orders of simulacra trace the shifting relationship between sign and reality across five centuries. The first order, belonging to the Renaissance through early industrial modernity, is the order of the counterfeit: representations refer to originals and are judged by fidelity. The second order, inaugurated by industrial production, is the order of the product: identical copies from a shared model, where the concept of original dissolves into the logic of the series. The third order is simulation itself: representations that no longer refer to any pre-existing reality but generate reality from models. The map does not describe the territory; the map produces it. Baudrillard located this third order in late-twentieth-century media culture, but the framework acquires unprecedented precision when applied to large language models, which operationalize the third order at industrial scale.
The Orders of Simulacra
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The first order governed craft, portraiture, and cartography — domains in which the measure of a representation