The concept of the 'metaphysics of presence' is an important consideration within the area of
deconstruction. The deconstructive interpretation holds that the entire
history of Western
philosophy and its language and traditions has emphasized the desire for
immediate access to meaning, and thus built a
metaphysics or
ontotheology around the privileging of presence over absence.
Deconstructive thinkers, like
Derrida, describe their task as the questioning or ''deconstruction'' of this metaphysical tendency in philosophy. This argument is largely based on the earlier work of
Martin Heidegger, who in ''
Being and Time'' claimed the parasitic nature of the theoretical attitude of pure presence upon a more originary involvement with the world in concepts such as the
ready-to-hand and
being-with.
Friedrich Nietzsche is a more distant, but clear, influence as well.
The presence to which Heidegger refers is both a presence as in a "now" and also a presence as in an eternal, always present, as one might associate with God or the "eternal" of
laws of science. In undermining such a
hypostatized belief in presence, novel
phenomenological ideas, such that presence itself not subsisting, but coming about, in a
primordial sense, through the action of our futural projection, our realization of finitude and the reception or rejection of the traditions of our time.
See also
★
Jacques Derrida