This paper develops a philosophical and cultural diagnosis of why contemporary life increasingly feels hollow, staged, or unreal. It argues that the deeper problem is not only fake news, propaganda, artificial intelligence, or declining trust, but a broader crisis of reality-contact. More and more systems can now generate signs of seriousness, intelligence, responsibility, care, transparency, and legitimacy without remaining sufficiently answerable to consequence, correction, or lived reality. The paper traces this pattern across multiple domains that are often treated separately: AI, politics, media, institutions, economics, validation culture, and everyday psychology. In each case, the same structural drift appears. Signal expands faster than reality-contact. Performance rises while answerability weakens. Reassurance becomes easier to obtain than truth. Visibility begins to replace worth. Intelligence scales faster than witness. Governance continues as theater even where actual control over underlying dynamics is weakening. The paper argues that this is why the world increasingly feels fake even when communication, data, and information are everywhere. The problem is not simply that falsehood exists, but that corrigibility itself is weakening in many visible systems. The proposed response is structural rather than cosmetic: reality-contact must be rebuilt through consequence, revision, witness, burden-bearing, and renewed exposure to what can still force change.
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Vladisav Jovanovic
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Vladisav Jovanovic (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e1ce065cdc762e9d8573a7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19595836
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