This essay approaches the question “Why am I here?” as more than a request for a ready-made cause or purpose. It argues that the question is, at a deeper level, a question about the very nature of human presence. Beginning with an analysis of the structure of the question itself, the essay considers the major classical answers—religious, naturalistic, existential, psychological, and spiritual—showing both what each genuinely captures and what each leaves unresolved. Its central claim is that human existence is not lived as a raw or mute fact, and that meaning is not an external supplement added to an already completed life. Rather, meaning is bound up with the way human beings are present in the world and with the intelligibility of that presence itself. From this point, the essay opens toward a broader philosophical horizon that the project of MARP seeks to develop more systematically.
Laurent Theophile D'Artagnan (Sat,) studied this question.