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Simulacra and Simulation: Memory, Presence, and the Drift of the Real

For those drawn to philosophical disquiet, symbolic drift, and the quiet collapse of reality into representation.

The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digitally narrated 

What happens when experience is no longer remembered as it was lived—but only as it was posted, captioned, or shared? In this episode, we trace the unsettling terrain explored by Jean Baudrillard in Simulacra and Simulation: a condition in which images no longer reflect the real, but replace it. From memory as metadata to love as algorithm, we explore the hyperreal as the world we now inhabit—not behind the screen, but through it.

This isn’t a summary of Baudrillard. It’s a meditation from inside his world. With nods to thinkers like Walter Benjamin, Fredric Jameson, and Marshall McLuhan, we explore how symbolic drift becomes emotional truth, how memory collapses into performance, and how even longing becomes a loop we’ve learned to format.

The simulation doesn’t lie to us. It reshapes us. And this episode attempts not to explain that shift—but to let you feel it.

Reflections

Some thoughts that surfaced through this essay-like episode:

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Bibliography

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The real hasn’t disappeared. It’s just been outcompeted by the simulation.

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