I,MALONE: The Philosophy of Idiosyncrasy argues that perspective is not a limitation to be overcome but the irreducible condition under which meaning, truth, and responsibility arise at all. Rejecting the philosophical reliance on universals, abstractions, and the "average subject," Darek Malone treats idiosyncrasy as structural rather than incidental, showing how each life is lived from a singular standpoint that cannot be exchanged, repeated, or fully translated. Moving through mind, solitude, meaning, ethics, social life, technology, and transcendence, the book examines what is lost when philosophy substitutes neutrality and system for lived coherence. Refusing both relativism and final authority, it presents philosophy as a practice grounded in responsibility without guarantee, concluding with an invitation to take one's own irreducibility seriously and to think from it rather than past it.