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Jean Baudrillard

The French sociologist and cultural theorist who diagnosed, in 1981 and again in 1988—long before any language model existed—the precise mechanism by which the map consumes the territory: the progression from representation that serves reality to simulation that generates it, and the condition he called hyperreality, where the simulation is more real than the real.
Baudrillard wrote his most prophetic passage in 1988, two years before the World Wide Web existed: “Surely the extraordinary success of artificial intelligence is attributable to the fact that it frees us from real intelligence. By hypertrophying thought as an operational process it frees us from thought’s ambiguity and from the insoluble puzzle of its relationship to the world.” The key word, which the cycle treats as the hinge of his entire diagnostic contribution, is frees. Not deprives, not robs—frees. The liberation from the burden of actual thought, from its slowness, its resistance, its irreducible relationship to a world that refuses clean answers, is experienced as genuine relief. This is why the adoption curves were vertical. This is why the developer could not stop prompting at midnight. Baudrillard’s framework for the orders of simulacra—the progression from counterfeit that
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