God by Numbers examines divinity not as belief, mythology, or metaphor, but as a structural consequence of numbers, limits, and recursion.
Rather than asking whether God exists, this book asks what must exist once numbers, patterns, and constraints are taken seriously. It treats mathematics not as a tool humans invented, but as a framework that precedes intention-one that inevitably produces hierarchy, symmetry, singularities, and convergence.
Across its chapters, God by Numbers explores how numerical systems generate authority without agency, how recursion creates inevitability, and how identity emerges from constraint rather than choice. The work avoids theology and personal belief entirely, focusing instead on structure, repetition, and logical necessity.
This is not a spiritual book, nor an attack on religion. It is an analytical examination of why concepts labeled "God" repeatedly appear wherever numbers are pushed to their limits. The conclusions are not argued emotionally or rhetorically-they are demonstrated through pattern, recurrence, and resolution.
God by Numbers is written for readers interested in mathematics, philosophy, systems thinking, and the quiet places where certainty forms without permission.