This article develops a constellational ontology of presencing in response to a persistent difficulty within phenomenology: how beings can appear as inseparable from the field of disclosure that reveals them and, at the same time, as exceeding it—standing there in themselves. Rather than resolving this tension, the article proposes that presencing is a reflective–diffractive event: a constellation in which participants co-emerge through mutual reflection. Each reflects the other from its own particularity and, in that very movement, generates diffracted surplus edges that exceed the field of their shared appearing. What appears as the thing's seeming independence is thus understood as the moment in which it slips beyond its reflected positions within the constellation and emerges as its own unreflected particularity. The argument reconstructs Husserl, Heidegger, and early Benjamin as converging on a shared phenomenological insight: that correlation exposes the world as simultaneously within and beyond the field that discloses it, even as each thinker inhabits this moment differently. On this basis, the article advances a constellational topology in which its participants emerge not as pre-disclosed poles but as surplus edges of a shared reflective–diffractive event. What is experienced as the "in-itself" of a thing is reinterpreted not as a metaphysical remainder beyond appearance but as the diffracted edge of a constellation that cannot fully absorb its reflecting surplus. To describe the concrete units through which such presencing becomes phenomenologically accessible, the article introduces the notion of amphibious entities: lens-like configurations in which reflective and sensuous dimensions align, allowing meaning to be seen, felt, and to attune us as an a priori resonance before things are identified as "themselves." The result is an ontology in which presencing names neither a relation between poles nor a property of things, but the oscillation along a constellation's liminal boundary through which one and the same being appears as gathered within its reflections from others—namely as standing in its own reflections and as leaping outside its reflections—as a thing-in-meaning and as this same thing outside meaning.
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Weinberger, Guy, Dr.
Freie Universität Berlin
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Weinberger, Guy, Dr. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69ba43764e9516ffd37a4c49 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.17613/q6hsa-jeg27