Published June 16, 2026 | Version v1

The Ground That Does Not Appear: Hume, Invariance, and the self

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Description

This essay revisits David Hume's critique of personal identity by accepting his central observation while rejecting his conclusion. Hume finds only perceptions in introspection and never the self that possesses them. Drawing on the concept of invariance under transformation, the essay argues that the self's ground is precisely the kind of reality introspection cannot encounter because it is not one of the changing contents but that with respect to which change is recognized as change. The argument develops a distinction between a heap and a structured whole, presenting the self as an invariant reference within transformation and showing why Hume's failure to locate the self is exactly what such a structure predicts. It then argues that even a structured self remains contingent and therefore cannot account for its own existence. The essay concludes that the contingency of the structured self points beyond any merely internal invariant toward a non-derivative reality.

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Related works

References
Preprint: 10.5281/zenodo.20708609 (DOI)
Preprint: 10.5281/zenodo.20032817 (DOI)
Preprint: 10.5281/zenodo.19121110 (DOI)

Dates

Issued
2026-06-15