Okay, so in Sethian cosmology, Goddess Sige ("Ain" in Kabbalah) is the "nothingness" or "void" befofe existence. Bythos is the "1". In computers, binary is a system of "1's and 0's". All information, even if it doesn't say "1" or "0" is still afterall, a 1 or a 0. This is a panentheistic teaching that God is both transcedent but yet immanent in all his creation. A "0 bit reality" is not a formal theory but a speculative or thought-provoking extension of this foundation. It can be interpreted in several ways:Pre-information existence: In computer science, zero bits represents the lack of any information or data. A "0 bit reality" could be a state of "pure potentiality"—the nothingness before the first "bit" of information is defined by an observer or measurement.A universe from "nothing": The concept of a mathematical zero can be viewed as the foundation from which all numbers—and therefore all mathematical descriptions of the universe—are derived. This echoes the idea in physics that the universe could emerge from a vacuum, or nothingness.Beyond binary: While quantum physics uses qubits that can be a superposition of 0 and 1, a "0 bit reality" would be a state even more fundamental than the binary choices we use to define reality. It may represent a level of existence beyond the structure of information as we know it, where everything exists as an undefinable potential.The nature of reality itself: It can also be seen as an inquiry into the fundamental nature of reality. Is reality "real" even when unobserved, or is it fundamentally tied to the information we derive from it? Some interpretations of quantum physics suggest reality cannot be described without a link to observation. You have the universe, the multiverse, the megaverse, the gigaverse, the teraverse, the exaverse, the xenoverse, the hyperverse, the omniverse and "the outside".
>>18053145Christianity is paganism. It's based off Canaanite religion. "Elohim" is always plural and means "sons of El". Yahweh isn't mentioned until Exodus 6:3 and it actually said EL created the heavens and the Earth. The Bible may be useful for understanding some knowledge, but I tend toward theosophy.
>>18053147Actually Yahweh is mentioned in Genesis 2:4
Religion isn't meant to be thought of that way.