This work explores the emergence of beauty as a structural consequence of compression and self-reference, rather than as an aesthetic or subjective judgment. Language, mathematics, and formal theories are treated as human-created compression devices that render the world intelligible. However, humans themselves are generated by the same world they seek to describe, producing a recursive loop in which structure precedes meaning. By tracing this loop across cognition, mathematics, artificial intelligence, and civilization, the text argues that beauty arises as a byproduct of structural recognition. Mathematical notation appears beautiful not by convention, but by information-theoretic necessity, reflecting symmetry, balance, and compression efficiency. Artificial intelligence is interpreted as an externalized cognitive mirror, making visible the recursive processes that have always governed human thought. The work ultimately proposes that coherence, beauty, and interconnectedness emerge naturally when structure is observed prior to interpretation.
Hinano Kimura (Fri,) studied this question.