The Haniwa Principle: Aperture as Cosmic Update Path in Closed Density Systems
Yoshimitsu KatayamaTheYKHC
ABI
Abstract
A fired-clay haniwa figure contains an enclosed volume (V) with minimal apertures — the eye holes. This paper proposes that these apertures are not decorative features but physically necessary structures: they are minimum-friction update paths (D→0) through which internal N-density equilibrates with the external cosmic field. We define this as The Haniwa Principle: any closed system that persists through time must possess at least one minimum-area, minimum-friction aperture through which internal and external N-density can be exchanged. This principle is shown to be universal across seven scales — from cellular membrane channels to black hole event horizons — all governed by V = N/D.
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