This paper argues that philosophy too often seeks the truth of a thing under a prior assumption: that the thing first stands in isolated identity, complete in itself, and only afterward enters into relation, attribution, and comparison. Against this, the paper argues that presence is prior to isolated identity. What appears first is not a self-sufficient unit, but a field of co-presence within which what will later be distinguished as self, thing, and predicate is first sustained together. Presence is therefore not reducible to mere perception, nor can it be decomposed from within, since decomposition already presupposes the attributive order through which distinct identities become available for thought. From this it follows that identity is not originary but derivative: a real but secondary stabilization achieved through attribution. The paper then argues that truth cannot be found by fleeing co-presence in search of a self-sufficient entity hidden behind it. Abstraction is legitimate, but it becomes false when it forgets its derivative status and presents itself as metaphysically prior to the field from which it was drawn. Truth must therefore be sought within truth: not outside presence, but within the prior reality from which isolated identities are abstracted. The result is a reversal of the ordinary metaphysical order of priority. What is primary is not isolated being, but co-presence; identity is secondary, attribution is derivative, and the truth of the isolated thing is never prior to the field within which it first becomes available at all.
Laurent Theophile D'Artagnan (Sat,) studied this question.