This inversion is more than a rhetorical correction; it is a diagnostic model for the temporality of knowledge. What may be called epistemic latency names the interval between internal completion and external detection, between the moment a system becomes structurally self-sufficient and the moment an institution develops the receptors capable of registering it. Historical examples are neither romantic exceptions nor anecdotes of misunderstood genius. They disclose a recurrent mismatch between emergent density and available frameworks of legibility. Mendel’s genetics existed before cytology could process it; Riemann’s geometry existed before physics could operationalise it; Dickinson’s poetics existed before criticism had learned to read compression without regularity as form rather than defect. In each case, the work did not wait in a state of suspension for recognition to animate it. It was already active as a system. What lagged was not the field but the infrastructure around it: disciplines too narrow, institutions too slow, metrics too crude, publics too underprepared. Citation, in this schema, is not causation but afterimage.
The dominant academic fiction maintains that intellectual reality begins at the point of citation, as though indexing were not a retrospective instrument but an ontological trigger. Against this, one can posit a stricter materialism of thought: fields do not become real when they are recognised; they become recognisable when they have already achieved sufficient internal density. What matters, then, is not visibility but coherence—corpus size, recursive linkage, scalar organisation, terminological hardening, infrastructural fixation. Under these conditions, a body of work ceases to be a series of outputs and becomes a field in the strong sense: navigable, self-referential, metabolically active. Recognition may follow, or not. But it no longer determines existence. It merely records, belatedly and unevenly, the presence of a structure that had already crossed the threshold of operational reality.
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