This paper argues that "why is there something rather than nothing?" rests on a presupposition more radically false than existing dissolutions recognize: absolute nothing was never a coherent candidate state of affairs, and neither was its mirror image, absolute everything. Both collapse under the condition that any candidate must be distinguishable as a state of affairs, though through different failure modes: absolute everything fails intrinsically, absolute nothing fails upon being posed as a candidate. What survives is not "something" victorious over "nothing" but a structural condition — Distinction, Persistence, and Ordering (DPO) — that any determinate state must satisfy in virtue of being determinate. Retortion arguments establish DPO's necessity; the background assumption of mind-independent determinacy shared by virtually all parties extends that result beyond acts of denial to anything that is. The paper addresses the dialetheist objection, Baldwin's subtraction argument, necessitism, and Shahid's challenge to transcendental arguments. The result is a dissolution more fundamental than PSR-based or conceivability-based approaches: a demonstration that nothing was never a candidate.
Nikita Sergeyevich Shchevyev (Thu,) studied this question.