I get the sense you might be asking about a specific work titled 'i am therefore i am', but that exact title has been used for different things (songs, poems, indie zines, self-published books), so I want to help you track the right one down.
If you can tell me whether you mean a book, song, album, short story, film, or even a webcomic, I can dig into publisher pages, music credits, or ISBN/Discogs entries for the first release date. In the meantime, a fast way I use: look up the title in quotes on Wikipedia and Google, then cross-check any promising result on WorldCat or the Library of Congress for books, and on Discogs or Bandcamp for music releases. Check the copyright page or liner notes when possible — they usually list the first publication or release year.
Tell me what medium or the creator’s name, and I’ll chase down the exact first published/released date for you. I love sleuthing this stuff.
Different angle: think like a librarian. Titles repeat, so finding the first published or released date for 'i am therefore i am' means identifying the exact item. Start with an authoritative catalog search: WorldCat will show editions, publishers, and years; the Library of Congress catalog can confirm U.S. publications. For music, Discogs will list first pressings and release dates; for films, use IMDb and trade press releases. Look at the imprint and ISBN for books — the earliest imprint and lowest edition number usually indicate the first publication. If it was serialized (magazine, web serial, or forum posts), the original posting date matters more than the compiled edition date.
Also, be careful with translations and reprints: they carry later dates while the original work predates them. If you tell me the author, label, or where you saw it, I’ll run these databases and report the first known date. I love digging through catalogs and seeing how things first appeared.
That title crops up enough that I’d need one more detail to be exact. Did you encounter 'i am therefore i am' as a book, a song, or something online? Quick tips: check the copyright page for books, the credits/liner notes for music, and the publisher or label’s announcement for initial release info. If you give me the creator’s name or the platform where you found it, I’ll track down the original release year — sometimes there’s a difference between a self-published date and a later print-run.
I’m not sure which 'i am therefore i am' you mean, and that’s where things get messy: multiple creators sometimes reuse the same phrase. I’d be happy to narrow it down, but here’s how I’d approach it straight away.
First I’d Google the title wrapped in quotes to force exact matches, then filter results to reliable sites—publisher pages for books, Discogs and Bandcamp for music, IMDb for films, and library catalogs like WorldCat for printed works. If it’s a translated piece, remember the original release date can be different from the edition you saw. Also check the copyright page, the metadata on streaming platforms, and ISBN or catalog numbers; those usually point to a first edition or release year.
If you tell me the author or artist, or where you saw it, I’ll dig deeper and find the precise first publication or release date for you.
I bumped into a similar mystery once when a friend quoted a zine title and I couldn’t find a clear release date — turned out the creator released a PDF first, then later a printed run with a different date. For 'i am therefore i am', try checking the creator’s social feed or Bandcamp page for the initial drop; artists often announce the first release there. If it’s a book, search for the ISBN on bookstore sites and WorldCat, and peek at the copyright page in a preview on Google Books or Amazon.
If you want, tell me one place you saw it (a bookstore, Spotify, Tumblr, etc.), and I’ll follow that breadcrumb to the original publication or release date. It’s oddly satisfying to pin down that first appearance.
2025-09-06 23:14:17
12
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
I am the dragon
BurntAsh3s
10
30.2K
Lucas Grey becomes the head of his family at sixteen. He realizes that his parents death wasn't an accident. His main goals are to take care of his two sisters and find his parents killer.
Lucas finds his bonded half but she doesn't want him, a brutal attack makes her go into hiding and Lucas has to suffer her nightmares.
By chance they meet again and the bond is as strong as ever. Lucas is stubborn, slow to forgive and Rylee is afraid of loving him.
Follow their story as they get pulled together by their bond but pushed apart by their actions as Lucas tries to lead his lair and protect his family.
“See how easy it is to excite you,” I said as my fingers pushed inside her. Her whole body stiffened as she looked at me.
“I don't love you Rylee and I wouldn't fuck you even if you begged for it,” I said.
Her hand made contact with my cheek as she slapped me as hard as she could and it stung a little as she pushed herself up and away from me.
“I fucking hate you,” she said coldly and walked over to the bed.
“You hate me? I hate you back!” I yelled at her.
“You expect me to believe your story but you won't believe mine?” she said angrily.
“You can't even remember what the fuck you did that night, I saw you coming out of that bathroom with him following you! Can you honestly tell me you remember what you did in there?” I yelled.
“I know myself and I wouldn't sleep with some random stranger,” she said as she looked at me.
“Except that you did."
A young black girl with silver hair, who was raised by her loving mother until the age of 12, has been thrusted into the world of werewolves, on the account of her father being an Alpha. He only finds out about this daughter once her mother dies. But the strangest thing is, she has no wolf. She smells human, but she's definitely his. The alpha brought her to live with him, and during that time, they both discovered things about themselves that neither knew existed. She was never just "human," and his "mate" was never his to begin with. This human girl was, in fact, a long, foretold gift to the wovles and a destructive force on those who waged war on good.
The mystery of love is greater than the mystery of death.~Oscar Wilde~Adoration is not profound enough a word to express the depth of my love for her. From the moment she walked into my life and set my heart and soul on fire, not a day's gone by that she hasn't plagued my every thought.We were each other's completion. She was everything I wasn't--the sigh to my roar, the virtue to my sin, the cure to my wounds.We Were One.Until the unthinkable happened.That I've survived such a tragedy without having completely lost it, is a mystery in itself. But as my mind starts to blur the lines between reality and my delusional heart, I begin to question everything, including my sanity.And then the real mystery begins . . .Author's note: We Were One is an alternate POV to Girl In The Mirror but both books can be read as stand alones without the need to read the other to follow along!We Were One is created by Elizabeth Reyes, an eGlobal Creative Publishing signed author.
When he and his father eventually decide to begin a new life after his mom and sister's death, Praxis Cohen, a suicidal teenager with an expressionless visage on his face, finds himself in a huge, formidable laboratory where teenagers like him are being injected a drug of which the effect is still unknown. Fortunate enough, his body can withstand the drug that leads him to be declared by Dr. Conscire as the first patient to have successfully passed the First Stage of the experiment in this generation.
As he proceeds to the Second Stage, Dr. Conscire, the president of the organization, decides to release him off the laboratory to find out that the effect of the drug enables him to read minds and do psychokinesis that sets his mind into chaos.
In his debacle as an experimented guinea pig of the nameless organization, realizing that he is not alone in this experiment, Praxis meets new marvelous people to discover the origin of the experiment, the reason why they turned into supernormal beings, the connection of this experiment to the unborn world war in the future, the twists and turns of their past stories, and to discern the next stages of the experiment. With the collaborative effort of their team, they strive to choose the best course of action to put an end to this fight.
At the class reunion, Grace Sullivan grabs me and tears into me with vicious lies. "She's an exiled Rogue who slept her way to the top with the director, Damian Pierce! My father's bed at the clinic? She spread her legs for it!"
She slaps me across the face, rallying others to join the beating. Finally, she stomps down hard on my hand, the one gripping the scalpel, crushing the bones.
Ethan Carter just stands there watching, cold and unmoved. He doesn't lift a finger to stop her.
The pain sends tremors through my entire body, but I scream right back at her. "You're just jealous that I'm the better healer, that Ethan chose me over you, so you made up filthy lies to destroy me!
"I'm a healer. Right now, your father is dying, and I'm the one who can save him. You want to stop me? Then get ready to plan his funeral."
That's when my father, Damian, storms in and roars the truth for everyone to hear. "She's my daughter! Everything she has, she earned!"
With my shattered hand, I push through the pain and charge into the operating room anyway. I'm not just saving a life tonight. I'm making sure the liar and the traitor both pay the price they deserve.
Chris Melberg is a normal werewolf who is suffering from PTSD. He decided to go back to the island where his PTSD activated. There his alter personality Nick Melberg, who is a cold hearted person found himself a human mate named Ashley Falls. Ashley is a talkative, clumsy and a girl with common looks. Her parents died in her childhood in an accident. While on the other hand, Chris also found a hybrid mate for himself named Emma Gray. Things get more confused when they find out the disturbing secrets of their past.
So, this is "I Am Not Myself".
A fight of two people living in the same body.
That phrasing caught my eye because it sounds like a mash-up of a classic philosophical line and a modern memoir. If you’re thinking of the famous philosophical statement, the closest is René Descartes’ 'I think, therefore I am' (Latin: 'Cogito, ergo sum'), which appears across his work—most notably in 'Discourse on the Method' and later in 'Meditations on First Philosophy'. Descartes was motivated by radical doubt: he wanted a foundation of certainty after questioning everything that could possibly be doubted, from sense perception to the possibility that he was dreaming or deceived by an evil demon.
On the other hand, if you mean the memoir 'I Am, I Am, I Am' by Maggie O'Farrell, that’s a 2018 collection of linked personal essays inspired by near-death episodes throughout her life; it’s a very different vibe—intimate, episodic, and reflexive about survival and memory. There are also songs and poems that use the phrase or slight variants, so context matters.
If you can tell me where you saw 'i am therefore i am'—a book cover, a song lyric, a blog—I can pinpoint the exact author and inspiration more precisely, but those two possibilities are the ones I’d check first.