Harman Baudrillard Essay
Harman Baudrillard Essay
Harman Baudrillard Essay
The late Jean Baudrillard is viewed in some quarters as the most frivolous author
in recent French philosophy. Some of this can be ascribed to his style, which relies
heavily on flash: on a speed of unmediated connection that often has the aroma
of the arbitrary. Consider the following passage, chosen at random:
Even when read in context, such passages often defy interpretation. His authorial
voice tends to build a case less by developing successive pieces of evidence than
by producing aphoristic paragraphs that count on the accuracy of their wit to pro-
duce agreement. Another example reinforces the point: “The obese somehow es-
cape sexuality and sexual division by the indivisibility of the full body. They
resolve the void of sex by absorption of the surrounding space.”2 These stylistic
peculiarities are one of two main reasons that some people are simply unwilling
to give Baudrillard a hearing.
But despite the continued low status of realism among continentally trained
philosophers, Baudrillard’s extreme form of antirealism is even more repellent to
some than his style. After all, he is remembered for holding the series of related
opinions that reality is nothing but a simulation, that America is merely a holo-
gram, and that the 1991 Gulf War – however high its casualty total – did not take
place.3 At first hearing, this sounds like just a hip cultural-studies version of full-
blown metaphysical idealism. And thus it might be asked how a philosophical re-
alist like me could possibly find anything of value in the rakishly antirealist
Baudrillard. Yet to ask this question would be to forget fully half of what object-
oriented ontology (OOO) teaches. While critical discussion of OOO focuses almost
solely on the withdrawal or withholding of real objects from their relations, this
philosophical current also has much to say about what does not withdraw: namely,
sensual objects.
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Since the source of this concept is the phenomenology of Edmund Husserl (who
calls them intentional objects), it is worth reminding readers briefly of his contri-
bution to OOO. We know that Husserl’s renegade disciple Martin Heidegger loves
to speak of withdrawal, veiling, concealing, hiding, sheltering, and preserving, all
of them terms for something reasonably comparable to Immanuel Kant’s unknow-
able thing-in-itself. For Heidegger, it is inconceivable that there could be a direct
access to reality in its own right; human Dasein is locked in a hermeneutic circle
and thus never comes face-to-face with some naked, ahistorical truth. In Husserl’s
case, the opposite is true: he tells us that it would be absurd to imagine an object
that could not, in principle, be the target of an intentional act.4 The world is a per-
fect correlate of the intentional acts of consciousness, and thus it is quite possible
for us to intuit the essence of any given thing, as long as suitable phenomenolog-
ical procedures are followed. Though it should be quite obvious that this equation
between objects and intentional acts gives us the most unabashed form of idealism,
time is often wasted sifting through claims by Husserl’s followers that he is some-
how “beyond” the realism/idealism dispute. In saying this, they mix together two
entirely different topics. The first question is whether anything in reality exceeds
its relation to us; in Husserl’s case, we have a clear answer in the negative, and
thus a frank idealism. The second question, not unrelated to the first, is whether a
philosophy regards objects as just bundles of qualities (à la David Hume) or
whether there is something in the object that exceeds a mere assembly of qualities.
Please note: it is only with the second question that Husserl becomes one of the
intellectual heroes of OOO. For despite his complete inability to address the real
objects that lie in a subterranean realm inaccessible to direct mental acts, Husserl
is deeply sensitive to the tense interplay between objects and qualities within the
sensual realm. Though this realm is not “real” in the sense of withdrawn reality, it
is nonetheless something of which philosophy must give an account.
In terms of his ontology, Baudrillard belongs in roughly the same camp as
Husserl. With his career-long emphasis on simulation and simulacra, Baudrillard
is the very opposite of a traditional realist, and he closes off the realm of with-
drawn substance at least as much as Husserl does. But also like Husserl, Baudrillard
realizes that there are important things to be said about these simulated objects
that we have called sensual. Even so, there is a difference in the favored emphases
of these two thinkers. Husserl focuses on the strife between the sensual object and
its two separate kinds of qualities: the sensual qualities that show up in every “ad-
umbration” or profile of the thing and the real qualities that belong to the eidos
of the sensual object and cannot be either swept aside or viewed with the senses
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in the way that its sensual qualities can.5 By contrast, Baudrillard shows little con-
cern for this anti-Humean theme of objects preceding their properties. Yet he draws
our attention to something equally important: the specific relation between the
sensual object and the beholder who is engrossed by it. Baudrillard’s name for this
relation between observer and object is seduction, which strikes me as a perfectly
good technical term despite its hint of empty hipsterism. Seduction is Baudrillard’s
proposed counterweight to the subject-centered concept of desire, thus paving the
way for replacing the exhausted modern tradition of the subject with an object-
oriented theory that Baudrillard treats as the only alternative path. Closely linked
with this concept of seduction is what Baudrillard, anticipating Alain Badiou’s re-
working of Kierkegaard, calls the wager.6 For Baudrillard, to give in to the seductive
power of a given object is to wager our lives on its importance in a manner that,
contra Badiou, cannot be rationally demonstrated. Let’s take a look at where these
Baudrillardian concepts (seduction, wager, and their kin) might lead us. Though
there are numerous publications in which Baudrillard brushes against such themes
in connection with the object, I have always found one in particular to be the most
helpful: the lengthy fourth chapter of his 1983 book Fatal Strategies, entitled “The
Object and its Destiny.”7
Baudrillard is correct that modern philosophy “has always lived off the splendor
of the subject and the poverty of the object.”8 The object has been treated as dead
matter occupying some specific set of spatial-temporal coordinates, while all hope
of novelty has seemed to lie on the side of the human subject, with all its hallowed
features: perception, rationality, cunning, dignity, autonomy. By contrast, the ob-
ject is “pure alienation.”9 It is commodity fetishism. It serves as a warning for how
humans should not be treated, since humans alone are taken to be ends in them-
selves. No one in modern Western philosophy is ever quite sure whether animals
are to be treated as subjects or objects, but almost no one wants to treat them as
full-blown subjects, and thus they are either reduced to the status of dead objective
matter (Descartes) or assigned to some vague third term such as “world-poverty”
(Heidegger) that is never really clarified.10 To aspire to be fully human entails as-
piring to be more of a free, dignified subject and less of a base, mechanistically
determined object.
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victim: neither realizes that all initiative and power are on the other side, the side
of the object.”15 Baudrillard even cites Jean-Paul Sartre saying much the same
thing: that I do not wish to be a disembodied subject dominating my victim as
object but to become a fascinating object in my own right.16 This entails the wish
to be taken for a fascinating appearance, for something that in fact I am not. But
for the most part, this remains a mere desire. What I actually am qua subject is a
real object, fascinated by something that is not entirely real.
In passing, it should be mentioned that this is not quite the OOO view of the
situation. Baudrillard seems to hold that seduction occurs when the real/causal
underpinnings of an object are suspended, so that it becomes a pure fatality, or
event without depth. The reason for this is precisely Baudrillard’s lack of interest
in Husserl’s distinction between the sensual object and its sensual qualities. For
OOO, the aesthetic or seductive moment occurs through an overt split between the
object and its qualities, and in this way the real depths of an image come into
play as part of its being. If we consider the familiar metaphor of the sun as a sower
of seed, we can see what Baudrillard misses with his model of the seductive object
as mere depthless surface. The sun in everyday experience is scarcely distinguished
from its qualities at all, though the distinction is already tacitly there. But if we
hear the metaphor that “the sun is a sower,” assuming that this is still fresh and
novel to us rather than an old cliché that merely provokes annoyance, the strife
between object and qualities comes to the forefront. First, note that the metaphor
is “the sun is a sower” and not “the sower is a sun.” Metaphors are never symmet-
rical but place one term in the subject position and the other in the predicate po-
sition.17 Here, the sun becomes a problematic object and thus a real one,
withdrawing into a questionable absence, leaving behind nothing but a halo of
sower qualities. In this way, OOO’s concept of seduction requires the absence of
what seduces, whereas for Baudrillard the seductive object functions through the
meaningless nullity of its sheer presence.
But let’s return to the main track of the argument. If the seductive entity is
roughly equivalent to OOO’s sensual object and the seduced subject is actually a
real object, one that really lives out its life in being seduced by the object before
it now, we seem to have nothing more than what speculative realism denounces
as “correlationism.”18 That is to say, seduction appears to consist neither in the se-
ductive object nor in the seduced subject but only in a primordial correlation or
rapport between these two elements. This would hardly trouble Baudrillard, who
has no commitment whatsoever to philosophical realism and would be perfectly
happy to treat seduction as a realm more important than any supposed real. But
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for the speculative realist philosophies, which are deeply committed to a reality
outside the play of surface effects, it may seem a bit puzzling to know how to
handle the relation between subject and object without becoming derailed. But
those who claim that realism can never overcome the correlate of subject and ob-
ject forget something very important: namely, the correlation between these two
terms (especially in the case of seduction) becomes itself a new real object. That is
to say, the bored attorney who becomes an impassioned priest is not just a correlate
made up of a formerly bored subject on one side and the regalia and lore of the
Catholic clergy on the other. Instead, the subject is now a priestly object, just as
hydrogen and oxygen combined form not a mere correlate between these two en-
tities but a new compound or combinatorial object in its own right. This is what
was meant earlier in the reference to a passage to a higher level.
Epistemology seeks the real in the form of the true: a direct access to what
temporarily hides behind the appearance of things until knowledge conquers hid-
denness and brings reality to light. But for OOO, the inwardness of things can
never be brought to light, and thus the reality to be had is not the unattainable
one hidden behind the sensual waterfall or rose but the new compound reality of
the beholder seduced by these objects plus the objects themselves. This is Bau-
drillard’s concept of the wager, which he unsurprisingly traces back to Pascal: “No
one escapes from this experience of investing an object, as an object, with all the
occulted force of objectivity. This is also a part of the absurd wagers we make, as
was the case for Pascal’s famous wager on the existence of God.”19 The name of
Kierkegaard obviously cannot be avoided here either. For who has shown better
than he that the weight of the evidence will never be able to settle definitely on
one horn of a dilemma or the other, and thus that we cannot hope to uncover a
reality behind appearance but only to produce a new reality on top of appearance
by surrendering to its call?
This helps explain why Baudrillard much prefers Charles Baudelaire’s account
of art to that of the recently more celebrated Walter Benjamin. Introducing the
topic, Baudrillard declares that “the absolute object is one that is worthless, whose
quality is a matter of indifference, but which escapes objective alienation in that
it has made itself more of an object than the object – this gives it a fatal quality.”20
Here again, it is “more object than object” primarily because it has been severed
from any meaning or quality and is thus fatal in the sense of the femme fatale: a
fateful woman rather than a lethal one. And what better example of something
that is “more object than object” than the commodity? Denounced by Marx as a
fetish and by Benjamin as the sad state of a thing stripped of its “aura,” the com-
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The work of art – a new and triumphant fetish and not a sad alien-
ated one – should work to deconstruct its own traditional aura, its
authority and power of illusion, in order to shine resplendent in the
pure obscenity of the commodity. It must annihilate itself as familiar
object and become monstrously foreign. But this foreignness is not
the disquieting strangeness of the repressed or alienated object; this
object does not shine from its being haunted, or out of some secret
dispossession; it glows with a veritable seduction that comes from
elsewhere, from having exceeded its own form and become pure ob-
ject, pure event.22
She puts on makeup and disguises herself. But the pleasures of car-
nival do not interest her; everything is a function of shadowing him.
She spends two whole weeks, at the price of incalculable effort, in
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keeping on his trail. She manages to find out about his plans, by
questioning people in the shops where he goes, and about what seats
he has reserved for the theatre. Even the time of his return train to
Paris, where, having taken the preceding train, she will be waiting
for him when he gets off, in order to take a last picture of him.26
The purpose of this pursuit, which is interrupted at certain points by violent reac-
tions from the man, is not to learn anything in particular about this relatively un-
interesting person. Instead, it is a sort of experiment in removing the meaning
from things by doubling them: “You seduce yourself into being the destiny of the
other, the double of his course, which for him has meaning, but which, duplicated,
no longer has any. It’s as if someone, behind him, knew that he was going
nowhere.”27 In fact, the interest of this exercise would diminish rather than increase
if the woman were to discover that the man was hiding some great secret, such as
a double life: a second family in Venice hidden from his wife in Paris, perhaps.28
I have often seen two dolphins in a public aquarium, perfectly mimicking each
other’s movements while swimming, in an activity somehow more seductive than
the mere reality of either dolphin taken in isolation. For Baudrillard, this is the
substanceless hyperreality that generates seduction. But for OOO, the observer
combined with the fascinating dolphin movements is itself a new substance and
hence the basis for a new realism built squarely on the foundations of illusion.
This point is not unrelated to Baudrillard’s critique of psychoanalysis, which
he rips for paying too much attention to solutions and origins internal to the sub-
ject. As he puts it: “No one holds the key to his own secret – this is the error of all
psychology, including that of the unconscious.”29 Psychoanalysis hunts for origins,
for early fixations and traumas and Oedipal triangles that shape the subject irre-
versibly:
Psychoanalysis has privileged one aspect of our lives and hidden an-
other. It has overestimated one of our births – the biological and
genital one – and has forgotten the other – the initiatic birth. It has
forgotten that if two beings are there presiding at our biological
birth, it always happens that others seduce you (they may even be
the same ones), and these others are in a sense our initiatic parents.
This second birth redeems the first one, along with all the Oedipal
conflicts so well described by psychoanalysis, but which really con-
cern only the first birth.30
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Now, the labors and insights of psychoanalysis have both been immense, and any-
one remotely sympathetic to its achievements is likely to see in this passage noth-
ing but a frivolous dismissal. Yet there is a real philosophical insight behind it.
Modern philosophy treats the human subject as something utterly different in kind
from all else that exists. In parallel with this, it also treats the human being as
something sufficient in itself, and as merely tainted or weighed down by any trivial
connection with objects. If one considers the way that political philosophy missed
the crucial political role of inanimate objects prior to Bruno Latour’s diligent work
to admit them, one will see that psychoanalysis has the same tendency to treat
objects too often as fetishes.31 By contrast, what would a Baudrillardian psycho-
analysis of seduction look like? It would focus less on the causal origins of the
neurotic subject who currently exists and more on the future adventures and li-
aisons of that subject. The dream becomes an event or turning point rather than
a symptom pointing backwards.32 Psychic history will be replaced by what Bau-
drillard calls a psychic destiny – and destiny is not what occurs when we sit brood-
ing in our room but what happens only through an encounter with someone or
something.33 As he puts it, “dreams … charm, and are charmingly prophetic before
they disappear into interpretation, where of course they take on the meaning they
are supposed to. Then they are no longer seductive, nor fatal; they’ve become sig-
nificant.”34 Or more poetically: “For Oedipus to return to Thebes and to the Oedipal
is problematic … the Sphinx has to be dead, which means an end has to be put to
seduction and its vertigo, to the enigma and secret, in favor of a hidden history
whose drama lies entirely in repression and whose key is in interpretation.”35
Another fruitful point of contrast between Baudrillard and OOO comes on the ques-
tion of causation. We have already seen that Baudrillard wishes to eliminate this
topic altogether, as when he speaks of “the derisory pretention of assigning a cause
to each event and each event to its cause. Any effect is sublime if not reduced to
its cause. Furthermore, only the effect is necessary; the cause is accidental.”36 He
continues the theme later in the chapter we are discussing. The first two sentences
in the following passage are Baudrillard’s sarcastic gloss of the traditional pro-
causal view, while his own position is indicated from the third sentence onward:
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The cause produces the effect. Therefore, causes always have a mean-
ing and an end. They never lead to catastrophe (they know only cri-
sis). Catastrophe is the abolition of causes. It submerges cause
beneath the effect. It hurls causal connection into the abyss, restoring
for things their pure appearance or disappearance.37
Rather than talking of “submerging” the cause beneath its effect, it would be more
accurate to say that for Baudrillard, causes are exterminated altogether. In a world
stripped of all depth, the only options are to appear or disappear, whereas a Hei-
deggerian sort of hiding is impossible precisely because there is nowhere to hide.
The fact that OOO recognizes objects as a surplus beyond all translation makes
it problematic to understand how objects are able to make contact at all. We cannot
say that objects make “partial” contact, a lazy solution often proposed by those
who either hope to one-up OOO or to help make it more plausible. The reason this
solution fails is that objects are wholes, and that if we were to claim to make
partial contact with an object (say, with fourteen percent of its surface properties)
the problem would still remain as to how the portion of the object with which we
have made contact is in turn able to make contact with the object as a whole. The
superficial plausibility of this “partial causation” model comes from an inability
to imagine causation as more than the collision of two physical objects, as between
two billiard balls that touch each other only at a minimal point but still succeed
in moving each other as whole balls. Billiard balls are certainly able to do this,
but not through touching a partial but real portion of each other. Rather, the part
of ball A that is struck by ball B is also merely sensual, since it is no more capable
of being paraphrased in terms of its relation than is the ball as a whole. For this
reason, I have written about the vicarious causation that occurs when a real object
makes contact with a sensual one.38 This entails further that causation is asym-
metrical, since a real billiard ball interacts with a sensual one, and even if we insist
that “for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction” (Newton), the asym-
metry requires that there be two separate but simultaneous causal relations: that
between real ball A and sensual ball B and that between real ball B and sensual
ball A. The assumption that all causation is symmetrical (as in Newton’s master-
work the Principia) is, again, based on an exclusively physical model of causa-
tion.39 Indeed, perhaps the physical realm is the only place where causation always
occurs in both directions. In the human sphere, it is easier to identify cases where
influence passes exclusively in one direction, or where one object has hegemony
over another with no master-slave dialectic reversing the predicament. In Guerrilla
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Two hypotheses about chance. First: all things are called to meet
each other, it is only by chance that they don’t. Second: all things
are scattered and indifferent to each other; it is only by chance that
they meet once in a while.
This last hypothesis is commonly held; the other one, paradoxi-
cally, is more interesting.41
OOO is perhaps the most tenacious version of the second position, the one that
Baudrillard calls “common” and “less interesting.” Its main reason for holding so
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is the impossibility of fully translating anything from its own place to another, as
if an object could ever be fully deployed in some effect elsewhere. Baudrillard is
committed to the opposite intuition, since his metaphysics has nowhere to place
an unexpressed reserve. Everything is a simulation, on full display in public. In
defense of this view (hypothesis 1 above), Baudrillard insinuates unconvincingly
that hypothesis 2 is automatically in bed with classical theism:
It is a brilliant version of the classical occasionalist position from which OOO has
learned so much. For the French Cartesians and their Muslim predecessors in early
medieval Iraq, objects are inherently isolated and unable to connect (or even to
exist from one moment to the next) without the direct intervention of God. For
Baudrillard, by contrast, things are so inherently connected from the start that
only an almighty deity could prevent their affecting one another. I have already
suggested that this idea requires the assumption of the perfect translatability of
one object into its effects upon another; such translation is what Baudrillard seems
to mean by his term “metamorphosis.” But a further difficulty for Baudrillard is
that he proposes no feasible mechanism of buffering to prevent everything from
unleashing its forces simultaneously on everything else. Why should I metamor-
phose only into those flowers and ice palaces that captivate me by their proximity
and not also into the universe as a whole? Baudrillard is on the verge of a hyper-
holism that threatens to become philosophically incoherent. And he is fully aware
of the problem:
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linking of forms one by the other, this magic order (for some, disor-
der) that we see spontaneously arise in the form of linked sequences
or coincidences (lucky or unlucky), or in the form of destiny, or in-
eluctable connection, when everything falls into order as if by mir-
acle.43
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We have seen the similarity between Baudrillard and Derrida in their fascina-
tion with the polysemia of the signifier, which always slips away into other pos-
sible contexts and thus cannot be pinned to the wall. As noted from the outset,
this puts Baudrillard more on the side of Husserl than of Heidegger, and I am in-
clined to read Derrida more as a Husserlian as well; Heidegger’s philosophy, with
its emphasis on the withdrawal of being, simply does not contain the staunch an-
tirealism that Derrida tries to ascribe to it. Nonetheless, I have tried to suggest in
this essay that Baudrillard smuggles a new form of realism through the back door.
Though the objects surrounding us are nothing but seductive simulacra, the wager
we make on whatever seduces is itself a new real object made up of me and the
simulation: one that is not just something to further amuse and seduce those who
observe me but that forms the very reality of my life. Jean Baudrillard seduced by
a woman is a different entity from Jean Baudrillard seduced by sociology or yacht-
ing. Rather than providing direct knowledge of a real object hiding beneath its
simulation, my bond with a simulation forms a new object different from both the
simulation and me. A skyscraper is built on a landfill of illusion. Our seduction by
simulacra is not itself a simulation.
notes
1. Jean Baudrillard, Fatal Strategies, trans. P. Beitchman and W. G. J. Niesluchowski (New York:
Semiotext(e), 1990), 23.
2. Ibid., 30.
3. Jean Baudrillard, Simulacra and Simulation, trans. S. F. Glaser (Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of
Michigan Press, 1994); Jean Baudrillard, America, trans. C. Turner (London: Verso, 2010); Jean
Baudrillard, The Gulf War Did Not Take Place, trans. P. Patton (Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana
University Press, 1995).
4. Edmund Husserl, Logical Investigations, 2 vols., trans. J. N. Findlay (London: Routledge & Kegan
Paul, 1970).
5. Graham Harman, The Quadruple Object (Winchester, UK: Zero Books, 2011).
6. Alain Badiou, Being and Event, trans. O. Feltham (London: Continuum, 2005).
7. Baudrillard, Fatal Strategies, 111–79.
8. Ibid., 111.
9. Ibid.
10. Martin Heidegger, The Fundamental Concepts of Metaphysics: World, Finitude, Solitude, trans.
W. McNeill & N. Walker (Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press, 1995).
11. Jean Baudrillard, Fatal Strategies, 111.
12. Ibid., 114.
13. Ibid.
14. Ibid.
15. Ibid., 119.
16. Ibid., 120.
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17. For my most recent discussion of this topic, see Graham Harman, Immaterialism: Objects and
Social Theory (Cambridge, UK: Polity, 2016).
18. Quentin Meillassoux, After Finitude: Essay on the Necessity of Contingency, trans. R. Brassier
(London: Continuum, 2008).
19. Jean Baudrillard, Fatal Strategies, 115.
20. Ibid., 115.
21. Ibid., 116.
22. Ibid., 118.
23. Ibid., 136.
24. Ibid., 129.
25. “S” is the French artist Sophie Calle, who followed a man (Henri B.) for her art project Suite
Vénitienne (1979) for a two-week period.
26. Jean Baudrillard, Fatal Strategies, 130.
27. Ibid., 129.
28. Ibid., 131.
29. Ibid., 133.
30. Ibid., 137–8.
31. Graham Harman, Bruno Latour: Reassembling the Political (London: Pluto, 2014).
32. Jean Baudrillard, Fatal Strategies, 139.
33. Ibid., 138.
34. Ibid., 142.
35. Ibid., 140.
36. Ibid., 114.
37. Ibid., 155–6.
38. Graham Harman, Guerrilla Metaphysics: Phenomenology and the Carpentry of Things (Chicago:
Open Court, 2005); Graham Harman, “On Vicarious Causation,” Collapse II (2007), 171–205.
39. Isaac Newton, The Principia: The Authoritative Translation and Guide: Principles of Natural
Philosophy, trans. I. B. Cohen and A. Whitman, assisted by J. Budenz (Oakland, Calif.: University
of California Press, 2016).
40. On the notion of dormant objects, see Graham Harman, “Time, Space, Essence, and Eidos: A New
Theory of Causation,” Cosmos and History, Vol. 6, No. 1 (2010), 1–7. Additionally, see Levi R.
Bryant, Onto-Cartography: An Ontology of Machines and Media (Edinburgh: Edinburgh
University Press, 2014).
41. Jean Baudrillard, Fatal Strategies, 145.
42. Ibid., 149.
43. Ibid., 150.
44. Jacques Derrida, Of Grammatology, trans. G. Spivak (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press,
1974).
45. Jean Baudrillard, Fatal Strategies, 151.
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