
This paper analyzes the structural characteristics of the Bible from a software architecture perspective. The Bible, compiled over approximately 1,600 years by around 40 authors in three languages, exhibits remarkable structural coherence analogous to modern software systems. The transition from Old to New Testament can be interpreted as a major API version upgrade (v1 to v2), while the Logos concept in John's Gospel explicitly declares the system's core architecture. Key findings include: (1) covenant history as version control, (2) typology as forward references, (3) prophetic comments as cross-referencing annotations, and (4) Revelation as a future changelog. This computational metaphor provides a novel framework for understanding the Bible's internal consistency and design patterns. 本稿は、聖書の構造的特徴をソフトウェアアーキテクチャの観点から分析する。約1,600年にわたり約40人の著者によって3言語で編纂された聖書は、現代のソフトウェアシステムに類似した驚くべき構造的一貫性を示す。旧約から新約への移行はAPIのメジャーバージョンアップグレード(v1からv2)として解釈可能であり、ヨハネ福音書のロゴス概念はシステムのコアアーキテクチャを明示的に宣言している。主要な発見として、(1)バージョン管理としての契約史、(2)前方参照としての型論、(3)相互参照注釈としての預言的コメント、(4)将来のCHANGELOGとしての黙示録が挙げられる。この計算論的メタファーは、聖書の内部一貫性と設計パターンを理解するための新しい枠組みを提供する。
Software Architecture, Version Control, Bible, Simulation Hypothesis, Logos, Space Simulation, Akashic Records
Software Architecture, Version Control, Bible, Simulation Hypothesis, Logos, Space Simulation, Akashic Records
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