Published April 10, 2026 | Version v1
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Does Time Need Me, or Do I Need Time?

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This essay develops a metaphysical account of time in which the present (the Now) is treated as an invariant condition of actualization rather than a moving moment within a temporal sequence. Against the common assumption that time flows and the present passes, the argument proposes that the Now is a singular, non-extended point at which all events are continuously actualized. What is experienced as temporal flow is not the movement of the Now itself but the succession of events occurring within it.

Time, in this framework, is not a substance but a dependent condition, arising only where change occurs within space and matter. The Now, as the condition of all actualization, cannot sustain itself and therefore points to a non-temporal ground that holds it open. This leads to a philosophical account of divine presence understood not as a being within time, but as the sustaining source of the Now itself.

The essay further argues that the singularity of the Now implies the singularity of the self: identity is constituted not by possible alternatives but by actualization within the one shared present. The resulting framework—referred to as a lemniscatic topology of time—offers a unified account of temporality, agency, and metaphysical grounding.

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Issued
2026-04-10