Being From Nothingness
Section 5: Bridge to Physical Formalism
5.1 From Philosophy to Physics
The preceding sections developed a framework from a single axiom: nothing cannot exist. We derived distinguishability as fundamental, identified five necessary constraints, characterized the geometry of constraint space, and showed how causality and time emerge from configurations with N ≥ 3 features.
This framework is philosophical—it concerns the structure of existence as such, not specifically physical existence. Yet if the framework is correct, it should connect to physics. Physical theories describe the structure of our universe; if that structure derives from the impossibility of nothingness, our framework should illuminate physical formalism.
This section explores that connection. We do not claim to derive physics from philosophy—that would require mathematical development beyond our present scope. Rather, we identify correspondences, suggest mappings, and note where existing physical frameworks already embody structures parallel to ours.
The goal is twofold: to show that the framework is not merely abstract but potentially applicable to physics, and to indicate directions for future formal development.
Section 5 of Philosophy Paper
Supporting Information further logical and mathematical argument for Section 5 of Philosophy Paper
Supporting Information further logical and mathematical argument for Section 5 of Philosophy Paper
Supporting Information further logical and mathematical argument for Section 5 of Philosophy Paper
Supporting Information further logical and mathematical argument for Section 5 of Philosophy Paper
Supporting Information further logical and mathematical argument for Section 5 of Philosophy Paper
Supporting Information further logical and mathematical argument for Section 5 of Philosophy Paper
Supporting Information further logical and mathematical argument for Section 5 of Philosophy Paper
Supporting Information further logical and mathematical argument for Section 5 of Philosophy Paper
