Welcome to the
Desert of the Real
Edited by
WILLIAM IRWIN
For Peter H. Hare,
Morpheus to many
Contents
Introduction: Meditations on The Matrix
1
Scene 1
How Do You Know?
3
1.
2.
3.
4.
Computers, Caves, and Oracles: Neo and Socrates
WILLIAM IRWIN
Skepticism, Morality, and The Matrix
GERALD J. ERION and BARRY SMITH
16
The Matrix Possibility
DAVID MITSUO NIXON
28
Seeing, Believing, Touching, Truth
CAROLYN KORSMEYER
41
Scene 2
The Desert of the Real
5.
6.
7.
8.
5
53
The Metaphysics of The Matrix
JORGE J.E. GRACIA and JONATHAN J. SANFORD
55
The Machine-Made Ghost: Or, The Philosophy of
Mind, Matrix Style
JASON HOLT
66
Neo-Materialism and the Death of the Subject
DANIEL BARWICK
75
Fate, Freedom, and Foreknowledge
THEODORE SCHICK, JR.
87
iii
iv
Contents
Scene 3
Down the Rabbit Hole of Ethics and Religion
9.
10.
11.
12.
There Is No Spoon: A Buddhist Mirror
MICHAEL BRANNIGAN
101
The Religion of The Matrix and the Problems of Pluralism
GREGORY BASSHAM
111
Happiness and Cypher’s Choice: Is Ignorance Bliss?
CHARLES L. GRISWOLD, JR.
126
We Are (the) One! Kant Explains How to Manipulate the Matrix
JAMES LAWLER
138
Scene 4
Virtual Themes
13.
14.
15.
16.
18.
153
Notes from Underground: Nihilism and The Matrix
THOMAS S. HIBBS
155
Popping a Bitter Pill: Existential Authenticity in
The Matrix and Nausea
JENNIFER L. MCMAHON
166
The Paradox of Real Response to Neo-Fiction
SARAH E. WORTH
178
Real Genre and Virtual Philosophy
DEBORAH KNIGHT and GEORGE MCKNIGHT
Scene 5
De-Construct-Ing The Matrix
17.
99
188
203
Penetrating Keanu: New Holes, but the Same Old Shit
CYNTHIA FREELAND
205
The Matrix, Marx, and the Coppertop’s Life
MARTIN A. DANAHAY AND DAVID RIEDER
216
Contents
20.
The Matrix Simulation and the Postmodern Age
DAVID
References: Originally, Simulacres et simulation (Paris: Éditions Galilée, 1981). Available in English as Simulations (New York: Semiotext(e), 1983) 66–71, 123-126 as well as Baudrillard’s The Gulf War Did Not Take Place (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1995).