Published April 19, 2026 | Version v1
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The Is and the AM: Presence, Identity, and the Ground that Holds

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The Is and the AM: Presence, Identity, and the Ground that Holds is a metaphysical essay on the structure of human existence, the nature of the present, and the grounding of contingent reality. It argues that lived experience is organized through memory, anticipation, and a present threshold of decision in which potential becomes actual. This threshold, described as the micro-gap, is presented as the phenomenological site of freedom, responsibility, and moral orientation.

 Using the lemniscate (figure-eight) as a symbolic model of temporality, the essay explores how identity is shaped not only by isolated acts but by the accumulated direction of the will and by relations that constitute the self through encounter, obligation, and love. Against accounts that treat time as ultimate or self-sufficient, the work proposes that contingent actuality does not fully explain its own persistence, pointing instead toward a non-derivative ground of being.

Within the biblical tradition, this ground is contemplated through the divine name revealed in Exodus: “I AM WHO I AM.” Integrating phenomenology, ontology, literary reflection, and theological interpretation, the essay presents personhood as communal, relational, and oriented toward a sustaining source beyond temporal succession.

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Related works

References
Preprint: 10.5281/zenodo.19502525 (DOI)
Preprint: 10.5281/zenodo.19581285 (DOI)
Preprint: 10.5281/zenodo.19558895 (DOI)
Preprint: 10.5281/zenodo.19599170 (DOI)

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2026-04-19