D1.2 — Bit Definition
Chain Position: 5 of 188
Assumes
- A1.1 (Existence) - Something must exist to be distinguished
- A1.2 (Distinction) - Binary distinction is the minimal case of distinction
- A1.3 (Information Primacy) - The bit is the atomic unit of primitive information
- D1.1 (Information Definition) - The bit is the minimal unit of uncertainty reduction
Formal Statement
Bit = minimal unit of distinction (binary choice)
- Spine type: Definition
- Spine stage: 1
Spine Master mappings:
- Physics mapping: Observables / Contrast
- Theology mapping: Genesis 1 ordering
- Consciousness mapping: Qualia
- Quantum mapping: Quantum distinguishability
- Scripture mapping: Genesis 1:4 light/dark
- Evidence mapping: QM experiments
- Information mapping: Distinction as bit
Cross-domain (Spine Master):
- Statement: Bit = minimal unit of distinction (binary choice)
- Stage: 1
- Physics: Observables / Contrast
- Theology: Genesis 1 ordering
- Consciousness: Qualia
- Quantum: Quantum distinguishability
- Scripture: Genesis 1:4 light/dark
- Evidence: QM experiments
- Information: Distinction as bit
- Bridge Count: 7
Enables
- LN1.1 (Matter-Energy Derivative) - Matter/energy decompose into bit-patterns
- LN1.2 (It-From-Bit) - Wheeler’s doctrine formalizes bit-to-physics correspondence
- A5.1 (Observation Requirement) - Observation extracts bits from superposition
- A6.1 (Superposition) - Qubits are superpositions of bits
- D4.1 (Kolmogorov Complexity) - K(x) counts bits in minimal description
- All entropy calculations (Shannon, von Neumann, Bekenstein-Hawking)
Defeat Conditions
To falsify this definition, one would need to:
- Demonstrate a unit of information smaller than a binary choice
- Show that binary distinction is not the minimal case of A1.2
- Prove that continuous information (nats) is more fundamental than discrete (bits)
Physical grounding:
- Bekenstein bound: S ≤ 2πkER/(ħc) — maximum bits in a region is finite
- Planck-scale discretization suggests bits are fundamental
- Quantum mechanics: measurement yields discrete outcomes (eigenvalues)
- Landauer’s principle: bit erasure costs kT ln(2) energy
Note: Bits and nats are interconvertible (1 nat = log₂(e) bits). The choice of base is convention; the discreteness of the minimal unit is the substantive claim.
Standard Objections
Objection 1: Continuous Information
“Real numbers contain infinite information. Information isn’t discrete.”
Response: The Bekenstein bound proves otherwise—finite regions contain finite bits. “Infinite precision” real numbers are mathematical abstractions, not physical realities. Every measurement has finite precision. The universe is quantized at Planck scale. Continuous descriptions are approximations to underlying discrete structure.
Objection 2: Qubits Aren’t Binary
“A qubit can be in superposition—not just 0 or 1”
Response: Correct, but measurement of a qubit yields exactly one bit. The superposition |0⟩ + |1⟩ collapses to |0⟩ or |1⟩ upon observation (A6.1-A6.2). The bit is the output of quantum measurement. Qubits extend the bit; they don’t replace it.
Objection 3: Trits and Higher Bases
“Why not ternary? Why binary?”
Response: Any base-n digit is reducible to ⌈log₂(n)⌉ bits. The bit is minimal because 2 is the smallest integer > 1. Distinction itself (A1.2) is inherently binary: X or not-X. The bit captures this logical minimality.
Defense Summary
The bit is logically minimal (binary choice = simplest distinction) and physically fundamental (Bekenstein bound, Landauer principle, quantum measurement outcomes). All proposed alternatives either:
- Reduce to bits (trits = multiple bits)
- Are approximations (continuous variables)
- Confirm bits as the measurement output (qubits)
Genesis 1:4 — “God separated the light from the darkness” — is the first recorded bit: the primordial distinction.
Physics Layer
Planck-Scale Discretization
Natural units suggest fundamental discreteness:
- Planck length: ℓ_P = √(ħG/c³) ≈ 1.6 × 10⁻³⁵ m
- Planck time: t_P = ℓ_P/c ≈ 5.4 × 10⁻⁴⁴ s
- Planck area: A_P = ℓ_P² ≈ 2.6 × 10⁻⁶⁰ m²
Bekenstein bound implies discrete information: Maximum bits in a sphere = area/(4 Planck areas). Information is counted in BITS, not continuous quantities.
Quantum Measurement
Measurement outcomes are discrete eigenvalues: For any observable A with spectrum {a_i}:
- Pre-measurement: |ψ⟩ = Σ c_i |a_i⟩ (superposition)
- Post-measurement: |a_k⟩ (definite eigenstate)
- Output: eigenvalue a_k ∈ {a_i}
Spin-1/2 as canonical bit:
- σ_z|+⟩ = +|+⟩, σ_z|-⟩ = -|-⟩
- Measurement yields +ħ/2 or -ħ/2
- This IS a physical bit: two distinguishable outcomes
Stern-Gerlach experiment (1922): Silver atoms split into exactly two beams. Physical reality gives discrete answers to yes/no questions.
Digital Physics
Lloyd’s computational universe (2002): The universe is a quantum computer. Its operations count:
- Total ops since Big Bang: ~10¹²²
- Total bits stored: ~10⁹²
- Both are finite, counted in bits
Cellular automata (Wolfram, Zuse): Discrete update rules can generate complex physics. The bit is the natural unit for such systems.
Landauer’s Principle Revisited
Physical cost per bit:
Experimental confirmation (Bérut et al. 2012):
- Measured energy dissipation during single-bit erasure
- Matched Landauer bound within experimental error
- The BIT is the unit of physical information processing
Connection to χ-Field
The χ-field’s information content is measured in bits:
- S_χ = N_bits (integer count)
- Coherence metrics count distinguishable configurations
- Kolmogorov complexity K(χ) = bits in shortest description
- The Master Equation’s integral discretizes to bit-counting at Planck scale
Mathematical Layer
Binary Representation Theorem
Any integer n ≥ 0 has unique binary representation:
Bit depth: ⌈log₂(n+1)⌉ bits encode integers 0 to n.
Extension to reals: Binary expansion x = Σ b_i 2^(-i) (may be infinite). Computable reals have finite K-complexity descriptions.
Information Measures in Bits
Shannon entropy in bits:
Conversion: 1 nat = log₂(e) ≈ 1.443 bits; 1 dit = log₂(10) ≈ 3.322 bits
Binary is minimal: log₂(n) ≤ log_b(n) for b > 2. Binary achieves the lowest representation complexity.
Boolean Algebra
The bit generates Boolean algebra:
- Domain: {0, 1}
- Operations: AND (∧), OR (∨), NOT (¬), XOR (⊕)
- Complete: any Boolean function f: {0,1}ⁿ → {0,1} has AND/OR/NOT expression
Universal gates: NAND or NOR alone can compute any Boolean function. The bit is computationally complete.
Quantum Extension: The Qubit
Qubit state:
Bloch sphere: Qubit state space = S² (2-sphere). Continuous superposition, but:
- Measurement yields 0 or 1 (one bit)
- Superdense coding: 2 classical bits per qubit (with entanglement)
- Holevo bound: ≤ 1 classical bit per qubit without entanglement
The bit is the OUTPUT of quantum measurement. Qubits extend bits; they don’t replace them.
Complexity Classes
Bits define computational complexity:
- P: decidable in poly(n) time on n-bit input
- NP: verifiable in poly(n) time
- BQP: quantum computers in poly(n)
Church-Turing thesis: All computable functions are computable by Turing machines operating on bits. The bit is computationally universal.
Base Conversion
Any base b > 1 is reducible to bits:
- One base-b digit = ⌈log₂(b)⌉ bits
- Example: 1 byte = 8 bits = 2 hex digits
Why binary is privileged:
- Minimal base (b=2) → simplest hardware
- Boolean logic is naturally binary
- Distinction itself is binary (A vs. not-A)
Collapse Analysis
If D1.2 fails:
- No minimal unit for information → information becomes unmeasurable
- Shannon entropy H(X) loses operational meaning (can’t count bits)
- Kolmogorov complexity K(x) has no unit
- Wheeler’s “It from Bit” has no “Bit” → LN1.2 collapses
- Holographic principle (bits per Planck area) becomes meaningless
- Quantum computing theory (qubit = superposition of bit) loses foundation
Collapse radius: CRITICAL - The bit is the atomic unit of the entire information-theoretic framework
Source Material
01_Axioms/_sources/Theophysics_Axiom_Spine_Master.xlsx(sheets explained in dump)01_Axioms/AXIOM_AGGREGATION_DUMP.md
Quick Navigation
Category: Information_Theory/|Information Theory
Depends On:
- [Information Theory](./001_A1.1_Existence]]
- 002_A1.2_Distinction
- 003_A1.3_Information-Primacy
- 004_D1.1_Information-Definition
Enables:
- 006_LN1.1_Matter-Energy-Derivative
- 007_LN1.2_It-From-Bit
- 035_A5.1_Observation-Requirement
- 045_A6.1_Superposition
- 029_D4.1_Kolmogorov-Complexity
Related Categories:
- [Information_Theory/.md)