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Synthetic Discursivity and the Simulacrum of Meaning

 

Synthetic Discursivity and the Simulacrum of Meaning

The expansion of algorithmic text production introduces a deeper rupture in the relation between language and experience.


We are entering an era of synthetic discursivity: textual systems that circulate without anchoring in embodied cognition, lived memory, or existential accountability.


Coherence exists without consciousness.
Emotion circulates without feeling.
Authority survives without epistemic grounding.

In this condition, language begins to detach from its traditional grounding in human subjectivity. It becomes self-referential, continuously generated, and structurally autonomous.


This is the domain described by Baudrillard as simulation: a regime in which representations no longer point toward reality but circulate as self-sustaining constructs.


The result is a linguistic environment that remains formally human while becoming structurally post-human.


In such a system, the distinction between authored thought and generated text begins to erode. Meaning is no longer guaranteed by intentionality but by statistical coherence.


The risk is not that language becomes artificial. The risk is that artificiality becomes indistinguishable from language itself.

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