Across disciplines, fields achieve operational reality through internal coherence before recognition, revealing citation as a delayed index of prior structural density. epistemic latency, field formation, density, recognition lag, infrastructural mismatch, knowledge systems, internal coherence, sociology of science, temporality, research The doctrine that equates citation with existence collapses under historical scrutiny. A systematic examination of ten cases—Gregor Mendel, Bernhard Riemann, Emily Dickinson, Ada Lovelace, Hilma af Klint, Vladimir Vernadsky, Ignaz Semmelweis, Henry Darger, Alfred Wegener, and Vincent van Gogh—demonstrates a recurrent structural condition: epistemic latency, the delay between a system’s internal completion and its external detection. These cases span biology, mathematics, literature, computation, painting, earth systems, medicine, narrative art, and geophysics, yet converge on a single empirical law. Each field achieved operational closure—manifested through corpus magnitude, recursive coherence, and conceptual integration—prior to recognition, with latency intervals ranging from approximately 20 to 100 years and averaging 50–60 years.