This work proposes a formal ontological framework in which Absolute Nothingness (000) is not merely an empty primordial state, but the asymptotic limit of infinitely many incomplete entities mutually circulating their inability of self-observation. Every entity is structurally incapable of fully observing itself, and therefore cannot establish its own existence with certainty. To bypass this impossibility, existence bifurcates into complementary structures and expands into cyclic networks of mutual observation. Within such networks, ignorance is not removed but conserved and distributed. Matter, asymmetry, consciousness, and individuality emerge as localized manifestations generated by the topological isolation of branches unable to perceive the whole. Absolute Nothingness is thus interpreted not as the absence of existence, but as the ultimate filling limit of infinitely dense, self-ignorant pluralities.
Jeong Min Yeon (Sun,) studied this question.