On the emergence of mathematics

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On the Emergence of Mathematics – LOGOS: How Mathematics Emerges from the Discrete Web of Reality

Which is more fundamental: the number π or a cube with sides the length of a Planck? The MĀYĀ conjecture answers: the geometry of the discrete plankton network is primordial. All mathematics — from integers to the most enigmatic constants — emerges from it as an inevitable consequence of structure and optimization. We present the LOGOS model: the theory of emergent mathematics.

Where Do Numbers Come From? Types of Numbers as Degrees of Emergence.

The natural numbers (1, 2, 3…) are simply an ordering of planxels. The basic operation of "successor" emerges from the discrete timing of the network. Primes are irreducible synchronization patterns in the network. They cannot be divided into smaller, identical, stable clusters of planxels. Their arrangement reflects the emergent "music" of stable network configurations, which may provide the key to the Riemann hypothesis. Irrational numbers (φ), algebraic numbers (√2), and transcendental numbers (π) are different levels of complexity in the discrete approximation of the continuum.

Mathematical constants are not given – they are calculated


The golden ratio φ emerges as the most efficient algorithm for dispersing information in a network – it is a continued fraction [1;1,1,1…], optimizing local interactions.
 
The number π emerges not as the ratio of the circumference to the diameter of a "perfect circle" (which does not exist in the discrete world), but as a smoothing parameter. It is the number that best describes how a discrete 3D network imitates continuous, isotropic space at the macroscale. The transcendentality of π is consistent with the hypothesis that it describes a limiting emergent parameter that is not directly encoded in the local algebraic structure of the network, but rather arises from a global isotropy approximation process.

The number e appears in mathematics as the limit of continuous growth processes, in differential calculus, probability theory, and quantum mechanics. In the LOGOS model, it is not a primitive mathematical constant, but an emergent parameter arising from local update rules in a discrete network. If the planksel updates its state based on the local environment at each cycle, striving for maximum stability or minimal information loss, then an iterative process of an exponential nature naturally emerges. The number e then describes the optimal limit of such local, self-sustaining growth as the number of update steps approaches infinity. In this sense, e is not a "continuous number" but an emergent limit—an ideal parameter describing the behavior of the network when its discreteness becomes invisible on a macroscale. Just as π describes the isotropy of space, e also describes the isotropy of the process of information growth and decay over time.

The imaginary unit i, formally defined as √−1, is sometimes treated as a purely abstract mathematical construct. In MĀYĀ theory and the LOGOS model, however, it is given a natural physical interpretation. If the state of the planxel is described not only by amplitude but also by phase (as in wave mechanics), then the simplest nontrivial operation that the network can perform is a local 90° phase rotation. Such an operation does not change the energy or norm of the state, but shifts it in state space. The unit i represents the minimal phase rotation operator, necessary to describe interference, oscillations, and coupling between information propagation channels. In this sense, complex numbers are not an "artificial extension" of mathematics, but a natural language for describing the dynamics of a network in which information has both magnitude and phase.

Euler's identity e^{iπ} + 1 = 0 connects five fundamental objects of mathematics: 0, 1, e, i, and π. In the LOGOS model, it is not a random confluence of symbols or "the most beautiful formula of mathematics," but a compressed notation of structural relations in the discrete network of reality.
1 represents a unit tick or planksel,
0 – no excitation,
i – phase rotation,
e – growth dynamics,
π – the global isotropy parameter.
Euler's identity can be interpreted as the shortest "program" that describes the full cycle of evolution of a state in the network: growth, rotation, phase closure, and return to the starting point. Its extraordinary simplicity may be a consequence of the fact that it describes the deepest level of synchronization between geometry, dynamics, and information.

The fine structure constant α≈ 1/137.036 is not a magic number, but the probability of optimal information propagation in a 3D network. Our formula: α⁻¹ = 360/φ² – 2/φ³ + 1/(3⁵ φ⁵) + 7/(3¹² φ¹²) shows how α emerges from combinations of fundamental symmetries:
360/φ²: 360 is not “degrees in a circle”, but the optimal quantization number of the sphere resulting from the combinatorics of the cubic lattice (360 = 3² × 2³ × 5), and the subsequent terms are:
-2/φ³: correction for axial anisotropy,
1/(3⁵ φ⁵): correction for the 3×3×3 block structure,
7/(3¹² φ¹²): correction for soft modes in larger clusters (Mackay).
The above expression is not the result of the standard renormalization procedure, but a geometric-combinatorial construction, the purpose of which is to show that the value α can emerge from the discrete structure of the lattice, and not be a fundamental parameter.

Resolving paradoxes and problems through a paradigm shift

Paradoks Banacha-Tarskiego wskazuje, iż w continuum możliwe jest rozbicie kuli na określoną liczbę części i złożenie ich w dwie identyczne kule. To ostrzeżenie przed nadużyciem aksjomatu wyboru i modelem ciągłej, nieskończenie podzielnej przestrzeni. W MĀYĀ ten paradoks znika. Przestrzeń jest dyskretna (Z³), a planksel jest niepodzielną jednostką. Nie można “rozbić” planksela, więc masa i informacja są ściśle zachowane.
problem „niepojętej skuteczności matematyki”. Zjawisko Gibbsa to wręcz modelowa analogia – 
 pokazuje, że gdy próbujemy opisać funkcję nieciągłą narzędziami ciągłymi, zawsze pojawia się nieredukowalny overshoot (~9%), który nie znika, nawet przy nieskończonej liczbie składników Fouriera. Próbujemy opisać dyskretne przejścia sieci językiem gładkich funkcji – i dostajemy nieskończoności, osobliwości, fenomenologiczne stałe, paradoksy typu Banacha–Tarskiego. To nie są błędy naszego rozumowania, lecz artefakty nieadekwatnego formalizmu.

Hipoteza Riemanna to najsłynniejszy nierozwiązany problem matematyczny. W ujęciu MĀYĀ hipoteza ta nie jest problemem czysto analitycznym, lecz może odzwierciedlać spektrum rezonansów globalnego operatora ewolucji sieci, a linia Re(s) = 1/2 może emergować jako średnia wartość własna tego uniwersalnego operatora. Badania nad dynamiką defektów fazowych mogą dostarczyć nowej drogi do zrozumienia (i ewentualnego potwierdzenia) tej hipotezy.

In LOGOS, prime numbers are not random, but neither are they regular. They are what in physics we would call the resonance spectrum of a deterministic system of high complexity. That is, the network has specific rules, but its global patterns interfere in a way that statistically appears random. This is exactly the same category as:
– turbulence,
– energy distribution in chaotic systems,
– vibrational spectrum of complex resonators.
Therefore, statistical analysis works, but a constructive proof of HR still eludes us. Because we are trying to solve the spectral problem with the tools of pure continuous analysis, instead of graph theory/network dynamics.

The anthropic principle as a selection of stable architectures


In classical cosmology, the anthropic principle is sometimes treated as the ultimate explanation: the universe has these parameters because otherwise we could not exist in it. In the MĀYĀ and LOGOS models, it receives a more structural interpretation.
If there is a space of possible network architectures (different geometries, updating rules, and topologies), only a small subset of them lead to stable, long-lived configurations capable of storing and processing information on multiple scales. Observers are therefore not the cause of fine-tuning, but the product of the selection of stable networks.
The anthropic principle then becomes a consequence of information theory: only in such structures, in which information can persist long enough to undergo self-conscious organization, is it possible to ask questions about the nature of reality.
 

Why does math work?


One of the deepest unresolved problems in the philosophy of science is the "incomprehensible effectiveness of mathematics in the natural sciences." Why do abstract formal structures, created without reference to empiricism, describe the physical world so precisely?
The LOGOS model proposes a radical reversal of perspective: mathematics is not a separate, Platonic realm, nor a pure creation of the mind, a language imposed on reality, but its product—an emergent property of the architecture of our concrete, discrete reality. Another universe, with a different basic network geometry, would have a different mathematics. We reveal the one written in the code of our network.
Mathematical structures that prove "effective" are those that reflect the real-world symmetries, resonances, and constraints of a discrete network. Those that have no counterpart in network dynamics remain pure mathematics, with no physical realization in our universe (as in the aforementioned example of the Banach-Tarski paradox).
The effectiveness of mathematics ceases to be a miracle. It becomes a selective filter: we discover and develop those fragments of mathematics that are compatible with the architecture of the world, because only these are confirmed by experience.

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