Multitime Barriers for P vs NP: Why Some Reasons May Not Travel in Polynomial Time

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

P vs NP is often approached as a question about algorithms and bounds: either exhibit a polynomial-time decider for an NP-complete problem or prove that no such decider exists. This paper proposes a different lens: treat P = NP as a transport property — do “reasons” (the operational structure that makes a solver succeed) travel across polynomial reductions in a way that remains auditable and stable? We frame this through the Temporal State Machine (TSM) kernel of Compositional Clock Theory: decisions occur under multiple clocks (execution, verification, audit), and progress must be governed by admissibility, receipts, and commit depth. We introduce abstain-gated decision kernels under a no-reopen discipline, where the system may refuse to commit unless the evidence is replayable and the recovery budget is feasible. Within this governance-first framing, “transport” becomes a commutation requirement between reductions and receipts: success is not only solving instances, but carrying a verifiable explanation of why the instance is solved that survives encoding changes and can be checked under declared costs. We instantiate the transport test on canonical NP-complete domains (3-SAT and Sudoku, as representatives), not to claim a proof of P = NP, but to define a falsifiable program: either discover a stable, general, receipt-carrying polynomial strategy (supporting P = NP), or demonstrate systematic transport failure that resists any admissible repair (supporting P ≠ NP). The payoff is a structured research agenda that aligns complexity theory with governance and audit, clarifying what would count as credible progress under Clay-level scrutiny.

Article activity feed