Chapter 3: Object Model (Architecture)
We face the immediate challenge of assembling the pre-geometric substrate into a coherent frame that satisfies our axiomatic constraints without introducing arbitrary complexity. Our inquiry demands that we identify a topology for the initial state, , that respects the directionality of time while providing a foundation for spatial expansion. We find that we must discard almost every conceivable graph structure; cycles are forbidden by the requirement of acyclicity, and disconnected components are rejected because they imply a disjoint reality with no unified causal origin.
By systematically eliminating these pathologies, we are left with a singular solution: a finite rooted tree. In this structure, causality flows unidirectionally from a single root, ensuring that every event has a defined ancestry and that influence propagates outward without ever circling back to negate itself. We determine its specific configuration by employing a scoring function to weigh the symmetry of the graph against its entropy, searching for a "flat" vacuum that contains the maximum potential for structure without favoring any specific direction. This search leads us to the regular Bethe fragment, a structure where every internal node branches with identical degree.
A critical dynamical obstacle confronts us in this perfect vacuum; the strict bipartition of the Bethe lattice prevents the formation of the odd-length cycles necessary for geometry. The system is effectively frozen in a crystalline stasis, unable to initiate the topological rewrites that drive evolution. We model the solution as a non-perturbative tunneling event, a symmetry-breaking fluctuation that introduces a single edge violating the parity constraints. This spark creates the first compliant site, allowing the rewrite rule to take hold and nucleate the phase transition from a tree to a geometric graph, bolstered by an isomorphism to quantum error-correcting codes that protects the nascent structure.
- Narrow candidates to the Bethe tree via cycle, connectivity, and sparsity exclusions.
- Confirm optimality through entropy score over enumerations and depth scaling.
- Show parallel updates preserve the automorphism group only on all compliant sites.
- Verify ignition via symmetry-breaking tunnel that nucleates a site and starts the reaction.
- Link graph to error-correcting code with commuting stabilizers and non-trivial codespace.
3.1 The Vacuum is a Finite Rooted Tree
We confront the foundational necessity of determining the topology of the universe at the absolute zero of temporal existence by identifying a structure that possesses the potential for infinite evolution while containing zero internal history. This requirement forces us to define a singularity of order that exists prior to the onset of dynamics and serves as the static foundation upon which the arrow of time can be erected without the aid of a pre-existing background. We are compelled to deduce a graph that satisfies the kinematic constraints of the theory without presupposing any antecedent events and effectively distinguish the moment of creation from the eternal void.
Admitting alternative structures such as cyclic graphs or disconnected manifolds into the initial configuration generates immediate causal paradoxes that render the resulting physics incoherent from the very first tick of the clock. A cyclic graph implies a timeline containing an infinite regress of justification where events serve as their own ancestors and effectively destroys the concept of an origin by trapping influence in a closed loop. Similarly, a disconnected manifold implies a fractured reality where influence cannot propagate between distinct regions and renders the concept of a unified physical law impossible by creating a multiverse of non-interacting domains.
We resolve this foundational crisis by identifying the finite rooted tree as the only topological structure that simultaneously enforces strict directionality and absolute global connectivity across the entire manifold. By rooting the graph in a single vertex with an in-degree of zero and demanding that all paths diverge without reconvergence, we create a causal crystal where every event traces back to a single unambiguous source. This structure embeds the arrow of time into the very shape of the vacuum and establishes the depth-parity bipartition that creates the necessary conditions for the first update to occur.
3.1.1 Recap: Inherited Definitions
The derivation of the vacuum structure relies upon the following established definitions and axioms:
- Logical Time (): A discrete, monotonically increasing sequence indexing the evolution of the graph (§1.2.1).
- The History Mapping (): A function assigning a strictly immutable creation timestamp to every edge, enforcing the order of operations (§1.3.1).
- Fundamental Graph Structures:
- Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG): A graph containing no directed cycles (§1.5.1).
- Bipartite Graph: A graph where vertices define two disjoint sets () with edges strictly connecting to (§1.5.1).
- The 2-Path: A simple directed path of length 2 (), serving as the minimal unit of transitive mediation (§1.5.2).
- Axiom 1 (Causal Primitive): The directed edge is strictly irreflexive and asymmetric (§2.1.1).
- Axiom 2 (Geometric Primitive): Valid physical geometry forms exclusively via the closure of directed 3-cycles (§2.3.1).
- Axiom 3 (Acyclic Effective Causality): The effective influence relation forms a strict partial order on the vertices (§2.7.1).
- Principle of Unique Causality: Information cannot be cloned; specific paths must be unique to serve as valid candidates for interaction (§2.3.3).
3.1.2 Definitions: Vacuum Topology
The following topological invariants and structural properties are strictly defined for the initial state , establishing the vocabulary required to describe the unique topology of the graph at :
- The Root (): A vertex is defined as the Root if and only if its in-degree is strictly zero (). This vertex functions as the unique logical singularity from which all causal paths diverge.
- Logical Depth (): The Logical Depth of an arbitrary vertex is defined as the length of the unique directed path originating at the root and terminating at . The depth of the root is defined as . For any directed edge , the depth satisfies the recurrence relation .
- Parity (): The Parity of a vertex is defined by its Logical Depth modulo 2. This property partitions the vertex set into two disjoint subsets:
- Tree Sparsity: A connected graph is defined as satisfying Tree Sparsity if and only if the cardinality of the edge set satisfies the exact relation .
3.1.3 Theorem: The Vacuum Structure
It is asserted that the causal graph possesses a unique initial state at Logical Time , designated . This state is constrained to satisfy the following topological conditions:
- Finiteness: The vertex set cardinality is finite ().
- Tree Sparsity: The edge set cardinality satisfies the condition of exact sparsity ().
- Rooted Orientation: The graph constitutes a directed tree rooted at a unique vertex .
- Divergence: Every non-root vertex possesses an in-degree of exactly one, ensuring that causal flow is directed strictly away from the root.
- Acyclicity: The graph contains no Directed Cycles (§1.5.3) and no redundant parallel paths (§2.3.3). This structure constitutes the unique topological solution compatible with the simultaneous enforcement of the Causal Primitive (§2.1.1), Geometric Constructibility (§2.3.1), and Acyclic Effective Causality (§2.7.1).
3.1.3.1 Commentary: Logic of the Topology Argument
The proof proceeds through a sequence of exclusions, carving the unique vacuum state out of the space of all possible graphs.
- The Foundation (Lemma 3.1.4): The argument establishes Existence and Finiteness, proving that the vertex set must be finite to satisfy the well-foundedness of the causal order.
- The Filter (Lemmas 3.1.5 - 3.1.7): The argument systematically excludes all cyclic structures. Irreflexivity removes 1-cycles; Asymmetry removes 2-cycles; and Monotonicity removes cycles, leaving a Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG).
- The Topology (Lemmas 3.1.8 - 3.1.9): The argument enforces Tree Sparsity. It proves that any edge count creates redundant paths, violating the Principle of Unique Causality.
- The Symmetry (Lemma 3.1.10): The argument identifies the Depth-Parity Bipartition, identifying the "False Vacuum" state where geometric quanta (odd cycles) are topologically suppressed.
3.1.3.2 Diagram: The Topology of Genesis
┌───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ THE TOPOLOGY OF GENESIS: MESH VS. TREE │
│ "Space pre-exists Time" vs. "Time creates Space" │
└───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
REJECTED: THE MESH (Cyclic) ACCEPTED: THE TREE (Acyclic)
(Infinite Past / Loops) (Finite Origin / Divergence)
[A]----->[B] [ ROOT ] (t=0)
^ | │
| | │ (Flow of Creation)
| | ▼
[D]<-----[C] [Event A]
/ \
STATUS: FORBIDDEN / \
Reason: Closed loops imply [B] [C]
pre-existing geometry and / \ / \
timestamp paradoxes. [D] [E] [F] [G]
STATUS: REQUIRED
Reason: Unidirectional flow.
No loops. Finite Origin.
3.1.4 Lemma: Existence and Finiteness
Let the universe possess an initial state at logical time (§1.2.7). Then the vertex set is finite, and the existence of infinite descending causal chains is excluded (§2.6.1).
3.1.4.1 Proof: Existence and Finiteness
I. Axiomatic Premises
Let the logical time domain satisfy (§1.2.1). Let the Effective Influence relation constitute a strict partial order on the vertex set (§2.7.1). A strict partial order satisfies well-foundedness if and only if every non-empty subset contains a minimal element.
II. Hypothesis
Assume the existence of an infinite vertex set at the initial state.
III. Derivation of Contradiction
The infinite set permits the construction of a sequence such that each element exerts influence on its predecessor.
This sequence forms an infinite descending chain within the order . The existence of such a chain violates the well-foundedness condition required for the effective influence relation.
IV. Conclusion
The contradiction establishes that the vertex set is finite.
The edge set is also finite.
Q.E.D.
3.1.4.2 Commentary: The Problem of Infinity
In standard field theories; the vacuum is typically treated as an eternal and infinite manifold; a background stage that exists prior to events. However; in a computational universe governed by discrete causal order; the assumption of an infinite past constitutes a logical paradox.
If the set of initial events were infinite; one could potentially construct an "infinite descending chain" of causes (). This would imply that the universe has no beginning; that causal history stretches back endlessly without a primary cause. This structure violates the well-foundedness of the causal order defined in Axiom . Just as a computer program must have a start instruction to execute; the universe must have a finite set of initial events to initiate the flow of logical time. This lemma anchors the universe in a finite and computable reality; ensuring that every event has a calculable distance from the origin.
3.1.5 Lemma: Exclusion of Reflexivity and Reciprocity
Let denote the initial state of the universe (§1.2.7). Then the existence of Self-Loops (§2.2.2) and reciprocal edge pairs forming 2-Cycles (§1.5.3) is excluded (§2.1.1).
3.1.5.1 Proof: Exclusion of Reflexivity and Reciprocity
I. The Causal Primitive
Let The Directed Causal Link define the elementary relation as strictly irreflexive and asymmetric (§2.1.1).
II. Reflexivity Analysis (L=1)
Assume the existence of a self-loop .
The effective influence relation includes all direct connections.
This relation violates the condition of Irreflexivity enforced by Acyclic Effective Causality (§2.7.1).
III. Asymmetry Analysis (L=2)
Assume the existence of a reciprocal pair of edges and .
The transitivity of influence implies the conjunction:
This condition violates both Asymmetry and Irreflexivity.
IV. Geometric Constraint
The Principle of Unique Causality restricts the creation of geometric cycles exclusively to the rewrite rule (§2.3.3). Pre-existing cycles of length or constitute geometric anomalies preceding dynamical evolution.
V. Conclusion
The initial graph contains no cycles of length .
Q.E.D.
3.1.5.2 Commentary: The Mirror and the Echo
This lemma systematically eliminates the two most trivial forms of causal paradox; the "Mirror" (Self-Loop) and the "Echo" (Reciprocity). These structures represent failures of the causal mechanism to propagate information forward.
- A Self-Loop () represents an event that acts as its own cause. In a computational context; this creates a deadlock; the event waits for its own output before it can begin. It is a process that consumes time without generating change.
- A Reciprocal Pair () represents two events that simultaneously cause each other. If triggers ; and triggers ; there is no distinct temporal ordering between them. This creates a "Simultaneity Singularity" where ; collapsing the distinction between cause and effect.
By strictly forbidding these structures; we enforce the Thermodynamic Arrow even at the microscopic scale. Information must always flow from a distinct sender to a distinct receiver; traversing a non-zero distance in the causal graph. It can never flow back to the source instantly; ensuring that every interaction drives the system forward.
3.1.6 Lemma: Exclusion of Cyclic Paths
Let denote the initial state. Then the existence of Directed Cycles of length is excluded by the Monotonicity of History (§1.3.4).
3.1.6.1 Proof: Exclusion of Cyclic Paths
I. Hypothesis
Assume the graph contains a directed cycle of length :
where for all .
II. Timestamp Analysis
The Monotonicity of History (§1.3.4) enforces strictly increasing timestamps along every directed path via the recurrence relation . The application of the timestamp function to the edges of yields a chain of inequalities:
III. The Cycle Paradox
Transitivity of the order implies:
However, the closing edge strictly succeeds its predecessor in the chain. The closure of the loop necessitates:
This inequality asserts that a real number is strictly less than itself.
IV. Contradiction
The inequality is false. The assumption of the existence of yields a logical contradiction. Furthermore, the existence of a cycle implies pre-existing geometry, violating the constructive definition of Geometric Constructibility (§2.3.1).
V. Conclusion
The initial graph contains no directed cycles of any length. We conclude that the girth is infinite.
Q.E.D.
3.1.6.2 Commentary: The Infinite Staircase
Imagine a staircase where every step goes up; yet after climbing a few steps; you find yourself back at the bottom. This is the precise paradox of a directed cycle in a timestamped universe. Since timestamps must be integers () representing the logical tick of creation; and there is no integer such that ; cycles are topologically impossible in a valid causal history.
This lemma proves that the "Infinite Staircase" cannot exist in the vacuum. If a path exists; the timestamp of each subsequent edge must be strictly greater than the last. To close the loop (); the final edge would require a timestamp greater than the timestamp of the first edge; yet it would also need to precede it in the causal order. This contradiction ensures that the universe is a Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG); a structure where progress is absolute and no observer can revisit their own past.
3.1.7 Lemma: Global Acyclicity
Let denote the initial state. Then constitutes a Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) (§1.5.1), and the formation of any closed path is excluded as the strict monotonicity of the vertex depth function along all directed edges implies that the depth value strictly increases indefinitely within a finite set of integers.
3.1.7.1 Proof: Global Acyclicity
I. Depth Function Definition
Let denote the length of the longest directed path from a minimal root vertex to .
The finiteness of the vertex set ensures that this function is well-defined.
II. Monotonicity Property
For every directed edge in , the depth must strictly increase.
III. Derivation of Contradiction
Assume the existence of a directed cycle .
The traversal of the cycle generates the inequality chain:
This sequence implies , which constitutes a logical contradiction.
IV. Explicit Verification (Bethe Fragment)
Consider a finite construction with coordination number and depth 2 ().
- Vertex Set: .
- Edge Set: .
Path Analysis:
- Path :
- Strict monotonicity holds: .
- Path :
- Strict monotonicity holds.
V. Conclusion
The depth function provides a strictly monotonic ordering on the vertices. No path exists that returns to a vertex of equal or lower depth. We conclude that is strictly acyclic.
Q.E.D.
3.1.7.2 Calculation: DAG Verification
Verification of the global causal consistency established in the Global Acyclicity Proof (§3.1.7.1) is based on the following protocols:
- Construction: The algorithm initializes a directed graph structure and iteratively constructs a "Bethe Fragment" with coordination number and depth 2. The logic enforces strict directionality by creating edges solely from parent nodes in layer to child nodes in layer .
- Topological Sort: The protocol utilizes the
networkx.is_directed_acyclic_graphfunction to perform a depth-first search traversal. This function tests for the presence of back-edges that would indicate closed topological loops. - Sparsity Check: The metric computes the total vertex count and edge count to verify the Tree Condition . This arithmetic check confirms that the graph remains minimally connected and contains no redundant parallel paths between vertices.
import networkx as nx
def build_bethe_fragment(depth, k):
"""
Constructs a directed Bethe lattice fragment.
Edges point from root (past) to leaves (future).
"""
G = nx.DiGraph()
root = 0
G.add_node(root, layer=0)
current_layer = [root]
next_node_id = 1
for d in range(depth):
next_layer = []
for parent in current_layer:
# Root splits into k; others split into k-1 (one parent, k-1 children)
num_children = k if parent == root else k - 1
for _ in range(num_children):
child = next_node_id
G.add_node(child, layer=d+1)
G.add_edge(parent, child)
next_layer.append(child)
next_node_id += 1
current_layer = next_layer
return G
# --- Execution ---
G_vacuum = build_bethe_fragment(depth=2, k=3)
# Topological Checks
is_dag = nx.is_directed_acyclic_graph(G_vacuum)
node_count = G_vacuum.number_of_nodes()
edge_count = G_vacuum.number_of_edges()
# Tree Property Check: E = V - 1 for connected components
is_tree_sparsity = (edge_count == node_count - 1)
print(f"Graph Structure: {node_count} nodes, {edge_count} edges")
print(f"Is Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG): {is_dag}")
print(f"Sparsity Check (E=V-1): {is_tree_sparsity}")
Simulation Output:
Graph Structure: 10 nodes, 9 edges
Is Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG): True
Sparsity Check (E=V-1): True
The boolean output True confirms that the Bethe Fragment construction produces a valid Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG). The absence of cycles verifies that the Logical Depth function acts as a monotonic clock, ensuring that causal influence propagates strictly from the root to the leaves without closed timelike curves. Furthermore, the edge count corresponds exactly to (9 edges for 10 nodes), satisfying the sparsity condition. These results verify that the recursive construction method yields a structure compliant with the global acyclicity constraint.
3.1.7.3 Commentary: The River of Time
By synthesizing the exclusions of self-loops (); reciprocal pairs (); and larger cycles (); we arrive at a global topological property: Acyclicity.
This means the causal graph is a DAG (Directed Acyclic Graph). In a DAG; flow is absolute. If you drop a "message" at any node and let it flow downstream along the directed edges; it will never return to where it started. It will eventually hit a terminal node (the "present") and stop.
This topological feature is what gives Time its direction. Without a DAG structure; time could swirl in eddies; trapping causal agents in eternal recurrence loops where the same sequence of events plays out infinitely. The vacuum structure ensures that from the very first moment; the universe is a River; flowing inexorably from the source; not a Whirlpool trapping its contents in stasis.
3.1.8 Lemma: Global Connectivity
Let denote the initial state. Then constitutes a weakly connected graph, and disconnected configurations are excluded by Acyclic Effective Causality (§2.7.1).
3.1.8.1 Proof: Minimization of Automorphisms
I. Setup and Assumptions
Let constitute a disconnected graph comprising disjoint components .
II. Causal Analysis
The effective influence order decomposes into independent strict partial orders on each component. No directed path crosses component boundaries. The full relation constitutes the disjoint union of the orders on the . This decomposition is excluded by Acyclic Effective Causality (§2.7.1).
III. Entropic Derivation
The automorphism group of a disconnected graph is defined by the direct product of the component groups and the permutation group . The cardinality evaluates to:
This product implies a strict inflation of relative to a connected graph of identical vertex count. This inflation establishes relational distinguishability between components.
IV. Conclusion
We conclude that the graph satisfies weak connectivity.
Q.E.D.
3.1.8.2 Calculation: Connectivity Counterexample
Validation of the entropic penalty for disconnected topologies established in the Minimization of Automorphisms Proof (§3.1.8.1) is based on the following protocols:
- Disconnected Topology: The simulation instantiates a graph
G_disccomprising two disjoint star subgraphs ( each), representing a vacuum state with broken causal connectivity. Each star consists of a central root connected to three leaf nodes. - Connected Topology: A second graph
G_connis derived from the disconnected state by introducing a single bridge edge between the centers of the two stars, establishing a weak causal path between the previously disjoint regions. - Symmetry Quantification: The algorithm computes the cardinality of the automorphism group for both configurations using the
VF2isomorphism algorithm provided bynetworkx. This metric quantifies the relational entropy cost of disconnection by counting the number of valid symmetry permutations.
import networkx as nx
from networkx.algorithms.isomorphism import DiGraphMatcher
def count_automorphisms(G):
"""Calculates the cardinality of the automorphism group Aut(G)."""
matcher = DiGraphMatcher(G, G)
return sum(1 for _ in matcher.isomorphisms_iter())
# 1. Disconnected Configuration
# Two separate stars: 0->{1,2,3} and 4->{5,6,7}
G_disc = nx.DiGraph()
G_disc.add_edges_from([(0,1), (0,2), (0,3)])
G_disc.add_edges_from([(4,5), (4,6), (4,7)])
# 2. Connected Configuration
# Bridge the roots: 3->4
G_conn = nx.DiGraph(G_disc)
G_conn.add_edge(3, 4)
# --- Execution ---
aut_disc = count_automorphisms(G_disc)
aut_conn = count_automorphisms(G_conn)
ratio = aut_disc / aut_conn
print(f"{'Metric':<20} | {'Disconnected':<15} | {'Connected':<15}")
print("-" * 55)
print(f"{'|Aut(G)|':<20} | {aut_disc:<15} | {aut_conn:<15}")
print("-" * 55)
print(f"Symmetry Reduction Factor: {ratio:.1f}x")
Simulation Output:
Metric | Disconnected | Connected
-------------------------------------------------------
|Aut(G)| | 72 | 12
-------------------------------------------------------
Symmetry Reduction Factor: 6.0x
The disconnected graph exhibits 72 automorphisms, arising from the permutation of leaves within the stars and the independent swapping of the two identical star components (). The connected graph reduces this symmetry group to 12. The calculated symmetry reduction factor of 6.0 confirms that disconnected states possess a significantly larger symmetry group ( vs ). This high "symmetry penalty" corresponds to a lower relational entropy state, demonstrating that the vacuum thermodynamically disfavors disconnection and validating the exclusion of such topologies from the maximum-entropy vacuum state.
3.1.8.3 Commentary: The Unity of the Vacuum
Why must the universe begin as a single piece? One might imagine a "multiverse" scenario where the initial state consists of floating; disconnected islands of causality. However; the thermodynamic principles of this framework strictly forbid such a configuration in the vacuum state.
The argument rests on Entropy Minimization. In graph theory; symmetry is often a proxy for entropy. A highly symmetric graph has many ways to rearrange its nodes without changing its structure; representing a high-degeneracy state. A disconnected graph maximizes this symmetry; as entire components can be swapped without affecting the whole. A connected graph breaks this permutation symmetry; anchoring the causal order into a single; unified manifold. This ensures that every event is causally accessible to every other event (given sufficient time); creating a single, interacting universe rather than a disjoint collection of solipsistic realities.
3.1.9 Lemma: Path Uniqueness and Sparsity
Let denote a weakly connected DAG on vertices where the causal redundancy inherent to is excluded by the Principle of Unique Causality (§2.3.3). Therefore, the vacuum state satisfies the exact sparsity condition .
3.1.9.1 Proof: The Tree Condition
I. Topological Setup
Let denote a weakly connected graph on vertices. The maximum edge cardinality permitting acyclicity in the underlying undirected graph equals . An edge count implies the existence of an undirected cycle.
II. Causal Analysis
In the directed limit, an undirected cycle necessitates either multiple directed paths between a vertex pair or colliding causal flows. Both configurations constitute redundant information channels, which are excluded by the Principle of Unique Causality (§2.3.3).
III. Probabilistic Estimation
Let define the redundancy density. The rewrite rule requires compliant 2-path sites satisfying path uniqueness. The probability that a site fails compliance due to path multiplicity scales as:
For any positive density , the compliant fraction falls strictly below unity. This deficit is excluded by the axiomatic requirement for maximal constructive potential.
IV. Conclusion
Any weakly connected DAG with contains causal redundancies. We conclude that the vacuum state is restricted to the exact sparsity .
Q.E.D.
3.1.9.2 Commentary: The Efficiency of the Tree
Why is the vacuum a tree? The answer lies in the Principle of Unique Causality. In a directed graph, adding edges increases complexity. If we have a path and we add a direct "shortcut" , we have created a "Transitive Redundancy." Information can now flow from to via two routes; the mediated path and the direct edge. This creates ambiguity regarding the causal history of : does it owe its state to the processing at or the direct injection from ?
Therefore, the Tree is the topological structure that maximizes connectivity while minimizing redundancy. It lies exactly on the "edge of chaos"; one fewer edge, and it falls apart (disconnects); one more edge, and it closes a loop or creates a parallel path (redundancy). This aligns with the Causal Set program described by (Sorkin, 2005), which posits that the discrete causal order is the primary structure of spacetime. By enforcing Tree Sparsity, we satisfy Sorkin’s requirement for a transitive order while imposing a stricter condition of historical uniqueness. The tree structure ensures absolute historical clarity; every node has exactly one parent (except the root). There is exactly one path from the Big Kindling to any specific event in spacetime. This maximizes the "computational efficiency" of the universe; no energy or bandwidth is wasted on redundant signals.
3.1.10 Lemma: The Depth-Parity Bipartition
For any rooted tree with all edges directed away from the root, the parity of the Logical Depth function (§3.1.2) forms a strict bipartition of the vertex set into and such that all edges in connect a vertex in to a vertex in or vice versa.
3.1.10.1 Proof: The Depth-Parity Bipartition
I. Set Definition
Let and denote the vertex subsets defined by the parity of the depth function :
II. Base Case
The root vertex possesses depth . This even depth implies membership in .
III. Inductive Step
Assume the partition holds for all vertices up to depth . Let denote a vertex at depth . The tree topology implies acts as the child of a unique parent at depth . The depth relation necessitates the following parity inversion:
IV. Conclusion
All edges connect vertices of opposite parity. The sets and partition the vertex set . We conclude that the pair constitutes a proper 2-coloring and bipartition of the graph.
Q.E.D.
3.1.10.2 Commentary: The Stratification of Spacetime
This lemma reveals a hidden symmetry in the vacuum: it is stratified. Because flow moves strictly away from the root; every step takes you exactly one level deeper into the causal history.
This creates a rigid "checkerboard" structure. You are either on an Even layer () or an Odd layer (). You can never jump from Even to Even; or Odd to Odd; because that would require a path of length zero or two; both of which are forbidden in a tree. This is physically profound because it forbids "horizontal" causal influence in the vacuum. Influence can only propagate down the generations. This strict layering is what prevents the vacuum from accidentally forming geometry; it lacks the "horizontal" connections required to close a triangle. The vacuum is a stack of causal generations; perfectly ordered but spatially disconnected within each moment of time.
3.1.11 Lemma: Exclusion of Odd Cycles
For all bipartite graphs (§1.5.1), odd-length cycles are topologically excluded. Therefore, the pre-existence of geometric quanta defined as Directed 3-Cycles (§2.3.2) is excluded within the strictly bipartite vacuum state (§3.1.10).
3.1.11.1 Proof: Exclusion of Odd Cycles
I. Premise
The Depth-Parity Bipartition establishes the bipartition (§3.1.10). No edges exist within or within .
II. Cycle Hypothesis
Assume the existence of an odd-length cycle of length :
III. Parity Traversal
Let . Traversing the cycle flips the parity at each step:
- ...
- (Since is even).
IV. Contradiction
The closing edge connects to . Since both vertices belong to , the edge violates the bipartition property:
This contradiction establishes that no odd-length cycles exist.
Q.E.D.
3.1.11.2 Commentary: The Impossibility of Accidental Geometry
This lemma constitutes the final nail in the coffin for pre-existing geometry.
- Axiom defines the "Geometric Quantum" as a -cycle.
- The number is Odd.
- The vacuum is Bipartite (Lemma 3.1.10).
- Bipartite graphs cannot contain odd cycles.
Therefore; it is mathematically impossible for the vacuum to contain a Geometric Quantum. This proves that Space (Geometry) is not a background feature of the universe that exists eternally. It is a structure that must be actively created by breaking the bipartite symmetry of the tree. The vacuum is "pre-geometric"; it has the potential for space (via -paths); but no actual space (-cycles). The universe begins as a structure of pure time; waiting for the first symmetry-breaking event to weave the fabric of space.
3.1.12 Proof: Demonstration of the Vacuum Structure
I. The Configuration Space Let represent the universal set of all possible directed graphs. The proof proceeds by applying the established axiomatic constraints as sequential filters to progressively reduce this set until only the unique vacuum state remains.
II. The Exclusion Chain
- Infinite Graphs (Lemma §3.1.4): Filtered by Well-Foundedness, which strictly forbids infinite descending causal chains. .
- Cyclic Graphs (Lemma §3.1.7): Filtered by Global Acyclicity, which forbids the existence of closed directed loops based on depth monotonicity. .
- Disconnected Graphs (Lemma §3.1.8): Filtered by Entropy Minimization and the requirement for causal unity. .
- Dense Graphs (Lemma §3.1.9): Filtered by Unique Causality, which mandates to prevent redundant parallel paths. .
- Non-Bipartite Graphs (Lemma §3.1.10): Filtered by Depth Parity, which mandates a strict partition . This structure topologically forbids odd-length cycles (Lemma §3.1.11), establishing the pre-geometric state.
- Bi-Directional Flows (Lemma §3.1.12): Filtered by Asymmetry, mandating a single source vertex (the Root) with strictly divergent flow.
III. Convergence The sole topological structure capable of surviving the full exclusion chain is a finite, weakly connected, acyclic, bipartite graph possessing an edge count of exactly and a unique source.
IV. Formal Conclusion The initial state is uniquely identified as a Finite Rooted Directed Tree. No other topology satisfies the conjunction of all physical axioms.
Q.E.D.
3.1.12.2 Diagram: The Bipartite Vacuum Structure
The vacuum organizes into alternating layers of even and odd depth. The graph is strictly bipartite: valid edges ( solid ↓ ) exist only between layers. Any edge connecting nodes within the same layer ( dashed --> ) or jumping two layers is topologically forbidden.
[ ROOT ] (d=0)
│
LEVEL 0 (EVEN) │
─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ┼ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─
LEVEL 1 (ODD) ┌─────┴─────┐
▼ ▼
[ A ] [ B ] < - - - FORBIDDEN
│ │ (Same Parity)
─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ┼ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─
LEVEL 2 (EVEN) │ │
┌─────▼─────┐ ┌─▼─┐
▼ ▼ ▼ ▼
[ C ] [ D ] [ E ] [ F ]
RESULT:
1. All valid paths must have length 1, 3, 5... (Odd) to return to same parity.
2. Cycles (returning to self) must be Even length.
3. Therefore, no Odd Cycles can exist.
3.1.Z Implications and Synthesis
The systematic exclusion of cyclic, infinite, and disconnected structures uniquely identifies the initial state as a finite rooted tree, a directed arborescence where causality flows exclusively from a single origin. This topology mandates that the universe begins with a defined ancestry for every event, embedding the arrow of time directly into the connectivity of the vacuum and preventing the logical paradoxes of closed loops or infinite regress. The application of constraints carves away all other possibilities, leaving a structure that is maximally ordered yet minimally specified.
This establishes the "Perfect Crystal" of causality, a pre-geometric substrate that exists prior to the emergence of spatial loops or metric distance. The identification of a unique root vertex provides a logical singularity, a "Big Start" rather than a "Big Bang", from which all history diverges. The strict bipartition of the tree into even and odd depth layers creates a hidden symmetry that forbids horizontal interaction, effectively stratifying the vacuum into discrete generations of causal influence where peer-to-peer communication is topologically prohibited.
The topology forces a strict "checkerboard" stratification of causal layers, rendering "horizontal" influence impossible in the ground state. This absolute ordering means that every event has a unique, non-circular address in the computational history, defining a coordinate system intrinsic to the graph itself. The vacuum is revealed as a rigid lattice of potential, where the capacity for geometry exists but the connectivity required for interaction is suppressed by the graph's own acyclic nature, locking the universe in a state of pure temporal flow without spatial extension.