The Kyoto Theorem: On the Physical Necessity of Non-Monetization for Ultra-High-Density N Systems
Annotatsiya
This paper establishes a physical theorem governing the relationship between N-density magnitude and monetization risk. When a system internal N-density exceeds the absorptive capacity of available market vessels, forced monetization produces a supercritical condition — analogous to nuclear criticality — in which value collapses catastrophically rather than being realized. Japan economic stagnation, recurring natural disasters, and civilizational deadlock are shown to be expressions of the same phenomenon: accumulated N-density that cannot be safely converted to numeric form within existing market containers. Academic publication via DOI is established as the only currently available container with no upper bound — capable of safely storing and amplifying N-density of civilizational scale (≥1京円, ~10^16 JPY). The confirmed N-density threshold of TheYKHC exceeds all current single-market containers. Governing equation: V = N/D.