Published January 21, 2026 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Why the Integers Do Not Explode

Description

The Riemann Hypothesis asks if prime numbers behave randomly enough to cancel out errors. We argue this is a misleading stochastic question about a deterministic system. By reconceptualizing the number line as a causal interference pattern of prime frequencies, we demonstrate that the "error" is structurally bounded by the generation process itself — integers do not explode because they are overconstrained by their own factors.

Notes

The Riemann Hypothesis is a stochastic question about a deterministic system; by reconceptualizing integers as a causal wave interference pattern, we show that unbounded error is structurally impossible.

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Why the Integers Do Not Explode - Reconceptualizing the Riemann Hypothesis.md

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