Lux(λ) |光灵|GEB
Lux(λ) |光灵|GEB|Oct 03, 2025 01:09
The consensus mechanism of Bitcoin isn’t simply the “longest chain principle.” What truly drives it to converge into a single order is the “heaviest chain.” Behind this distinction lies the deep logic of Turing machines, ordinal logic, and Nash equilibrium. 2/ The longest chain corresponds to Turing’s ordinal logic system. It uses block height as the direction for transfinite iteration, similar to pointer recursion in ordinal logic, allowing for infinite extension. However, this extension cannot converge into a unique solution and lacks stability. 3/ In other words, the longest chain is merely a deduction of formal logic: it ensures the system continues to evolve but cannot guarantee consistency in the final outcome. Just like ordinal logic constantly pursues “completeness,” it can only diverge into infinity. 4/ The heaviest chain, on the other hand, is different. It introduces Nash non-cooperative game theory on top of ordinal logic, specifically manifested as the computational power competition in PoW (Proof of Work). Through the cost-benefit decisions in the game, the system’s infinite divergence is able to converge into a unique solution. 5/ This means the heaviest chain is not just a simple logical evolution but a combination of logic and game theory. It naturally consolidates the potentially divergent ordinal logic through computational power competition, forming a unique global consensus. 6/ Therefore, the difference between the “longest chain” and the “heaviest chain” lies in the Nash non-cooperative game model of PoW. Without the game: Logic can infinitely deduce, but results diverge. With the game: Logic is constrained, and results converge into uniqueness. 7/ Let’s compare these three types of systems: - Turing machine systems: Pursue consistency → Computable, answers can be restored. - Ordinal logic systems: Pursue completeness → Infinite divergence, non-convergent. - Non-cooperative game systems (PoW): Pursue convergence → Divergence consolidates into a unique solution. 8/ This is where Bitcoin’s uniqueness lies: it doesn’t stop at the “consistency of Turing machines,” nor does it get lost in the “completeness of ordinal logic.” Instead, it builds on both, achieving convergence on the foundation of incomputability through PoW Nash equilibrium. 9/ This is the logical watershed between the “longest chain” and the “heaviest chain.” It explains why Bitcoin can not only continuously evolve but also consolidate a unique order amidst infinite divergence.
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