The apparent fine-tuning of physical constants is commonly interpreted through anthropic reasoning, suggesting the universe appears calibrated for life only because such configurations admit observers. This paper argues that this explanation is structurally insufficient and proposes a contrasting framework grounded in the Theory of Axiomatic Necessity (TNA). Within TNA, physical constants are reinterpreted as metamathematically necessary constraints (Deltas) required to prevent global incoherence rather than contingent parameters selected by observational survivability.The analysis shows that variation of a fundamental constant does not yield a viable alternative universe, but a logically unstable non-system incapable of sustaining coherent structure or signal propagation. Consequently, fine-tuning is relocated from biology to structure, serving as a diagnostic of incomplete ontology rather than evidence of luck or multiverse ensembles. Ultimately, the universe is not improbably balanced for life; life is permitted because the universe achieves the minimal structural resolution required to exist as a coherent manifold. “Within the Theory of Axiomatic Necessity, fundamental constants function like ingredients in a unique cosmic recipe: variation does not yield ‘other viable dishes’ but uncooked dough—structurally incoherent systems incapable of rising into a coherent universe.”
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Claudio Bresciano (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6980fd60c1c9540dea80f0fd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18408496
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Claudio Bresciano
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