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Description

In this episode, I begin a new series on Slavoj Žižek’s Quantum History: A New Materialist Philosophy, starting with the Introduction and Chapter 1, “Why a Hegelian Needs Quantum Mechanics.”

This is not an attempt to turn quantum mechanics into a vague spiritual metaphor, and it is definitely not a physics lecture. Instead, I’m interested in what Žižek is trying to do philosophically: to rethink materialism after quantum mechanics, Hegel, psychoanalysis, and the strange collapse of our ordinary categories of reality.

The central idea I explore here is Žižek’s claim that collapse comes first. Rather than imagining reality as a stable field of possibilities that later collapses into one outcome, Žižek asks us to consider whether collapse retroactively gives shape to the field itself. From there, I reflect on Hegel, the observer, the Real, contradiction, history, and why a truly materialist philosophy may need to become much stranger than the older, flatter versions of materialism allowed.

This first episode is meant to be careful and in-depth, but still digestible — a way of entering the book without reducing it, and of staying with the difficulty of Žižek’s thought without turning it into jargon or easy summary.