tag: William Burroughs

The Exegesis: Notes on Plato’s Timaeus and Burroughs’ The Ticket That Exploded

The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick
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March 1978

Dick is reading Francis Cornford’s book on Plato’s Timaeus dialogue. Plato says the world is a living organism that includes a constant element of chaos that the Noös (Dick’s term) is trying to bring to order. The Judeo-Christian story does not account for this. Dick’s own experience matches Plato’s theories and not the Christian one. 

Dick has depicted this chaos in Ubik (as entropy) and in A Maze of Death. The universe, with this irrational element, is partly insane, and Christ’s return will finally eliminate this disorder and heal the world. 

Dick reads The Ticket That Exploded by William Burroughs and examines the parallels between that story and what happened to him. The virus in Burroughs’ book blocks the reception of information. Dick connects this to his earlier ideas when he was studying Julian Jaynes and the loss of divine voices in the past. Since divine wisdom can’t reach us through normal channels it has to break through somehow which is what briefly happened to him. What Dick saw was the vast living body of the universe.