M4 Test Analysis
Complete breakdown of what's proven and what's not
The Balance Law (τ₁ + τ₂ + τ₃ + τ₄ = 0) was tested with 1000 random input values. In every single case, the sum of torsions was essentially zero - the maximum deviation was 1.42e-14, which is floating-point precision noise, not actual imbalance.
Implication
The Balance Law is a validated geometric principle. This is mathematical fact, not speculation.
T₁ + T₂ + T₃ + T₄ = (0, 0) always holds. The four transforms (facing, mirror, recursive, inverted) positioned at the diagonal nodes of the dipyramid sum to zero.
Implication
This is geometric necessity, not assumption. The transform identity is proven.
The energy decay in the simulator doesn't exactly match (59/60)^180. After 180 steps, we expected 4.85% energy remaining but measured 3.64% on average.
Implication
This is likely an implementation issue, not a fundamental flaw. The transform operations may be compounding differently than expected. Needs refinement.
This is the critical test. The claim was that the geometry allows "resolution without iteration" - finding solutions in one step. Our tests show 0% zero-step resolutions. Problems still need to step through the tetrahelix to find clean solutions, averaging 138.1 steps.
Core Hypothesis Unproven
The claim that "the geometry resolves without iteration" is NOT demonstrated in this implementation. This doesn't mean it's wrong - it may mean the resolution algorithm needs redesign.
Base-60 and base-10 produce mathematically identical results. The average difference is 1.2e-16 - essentially zero (floating-point noise). The choice of base is computational convenience, not fundamental difference.
Implication
This debunks the claim that base-60 is computationally special. There's no "magic" in base-60 vs base-10.
Honest Assessment
✓ What IS Validated
-
Balance Law works - The four torsions sum to zero. This is mathematical fact.
-
Transform identity works - T₁+T₂+T₃+T₄ = (0,0). Geometric fact.
-
The geometry is self-consistent - No contradictions found.
✗ What is NOT Validated
-
"Resolution without iteration" - Still requires iteration. No advantage over conventional approaches demonstrated.
-
"One move is checkmate" - Not demonstrated. Problems still need many steps (avg 138).
-
"Base-60 computational advantage" - Not demonstrated. Same results as base-10.
-
"^32 information density" - Not testable in current implementation.
What Needs to Happen Next
Recommendation for M4 Hardware
Before investing $12,600 in Mac hardware: The simulator should demonstrate SOME advantage first. "Resolution without iteration" is not proven. Continue software simulation until we can demonstrate measurable advantage.