Abstract
This chapter offers a philosophical reflection on the truth of the medial and the state of exception. It begins with the notion that every single media carrier—be it “natural” or produced by technical means—basically allows for only two operations with signs: to save and to transfer. The entire medial economy that operates with signs makes use of these two operations. All signs have a meaningless, nonsemantic, purely formal, and simultaneously material side beyond all signification. When we confront the media, we are constantly aware of the hidden presence of submedial space. Yet we are structurally incapable of seeing through it as long as we are busy looking at the medial surface. This chapter argues that the media-ontological suspicion is “objective” in the phenomenological sense, because it necessarily appears during the act of observing the medial surface. It also examines the truth of media-ontology as well as the truth of the state of exception in relation to the media-ontological suspicion that defines our perception of the medial surface.