Q: Will any statements of "Omnipotence" or "Being able to do anything, even the illogical" qualify for this tier?
A: Not at all, no. Firstly, random statements of "omnipotence" wouldn't qualify for
reasons I already explained.
As for "Able to do anything" and similar: That would not qualify either. As the definition above makes plainly clear, Tier 0 inherently revolves around the nature of the character's existence, and not around the acts of which they are capable. As such, it is already obvious that a layman's understanding of "Omnipotence" (I.e. "Capable of doing literally everything") doesn't really have any immediate place in the Tiering System I am proposing. Any character trying to qualify for 0 would need to have the exact properties I've described above. And if they don't, they simply aren't Tier 0.
An example I often see being brought up in debates regarding this topic is the Magic Gods from To Aru, who are described in the verse as having power that allows them to access all possibilities, including contradictory ones, which thus creates an Omnipotence Paradox. Do they qualify for my proposal of Tier 0?
Evidently not. Not only are there multiple of them, but apparently they can die, their power can be divided into parts and decreased, and people can become Magic Gods, so clearly they have composition and differentiation in them, as well as potentiality. Thus, case dismissed.
This effectively falls into the principle of "Statements of limitlessness require a mechanism in order to be taken seriously." In this case, empty claims of unsurpassable power would not qualify for anything, but if there is information which tells us that a character, by the nature of its very existence, is necessarily unsurpassable, then we have an impetus to accept it.
Q: Is it possible to prove that a character is Tier 0 at all?
A: The notion that something being absolute and unsurpassable is "inherently unprovable" is something extremely proliferated across both this community and other communities. In fact, to quote
one of our own pages:
In a sense, I don't find this disagreeable at all. Specifically, the notion is correct when we think of attempting to "reach" absoluteness by
adding to a character. Usually, a layman will think of terms like "Omnipotence" as "The greatest amount of power possible" and similar definitions. This way of thinking, of course, runs into a wall when considering the fact that, ultimately, something can always be added to. You can always add more attributes to a character. No matter how elaborate a description is, it can always be
more elaborate. You can always add to a pile, effectively. As such, it is impossible to objectively tell when, exactly, something can no longer be added to.
However, this kind of thinking doesn't really apply to what I am advocating for, since under the above definitions, Tier 0 is not about "adding" something to a character, but rather about
removing things from it (In this case, composition and differentiation), which is to say that absoluteness wouldn't really be gotten through obtaining more qualities (Or increasing the degree of those qualities) but rather by abandoning this whole framework altogether. A funny analogy you could use to understand the concept, I think, is this: Usually, people think of absoluteness as being about having "The biggest house possible." But that's wrong. Absoluteness would in fact require you to not have a house in the first place.
In this sense, it is not impossible to prove that a character is Tier 0 at all, no. If that is deemed impossible to prove, then clearly it is also impossible to prove that a character lacks a soul, or spacetime, or any other attribute.
Now, is it easy to contradict being Tier 0? Extremely, as seen by the list of requirements above. That makes it a
rare tier, but by no means an impossible one. However, one might be tempted to argue that such a character
being described at all already prevents them from being Tier 0, and as such, that the tier is impossible to obtain. This leads us to...
Q: Is a Tier 0 character just nothingness, then?
A: Evidently not. Nothingness in the most absolute sense would not be capable of producing any effects that extend outwards from itself, as effects require a cause, and the nonexistence of a cause would thus imply the nonexistence of effects. So the Tier 0 character, being an identifiable thing capable of producing effects, must exist in some way.
Now, also evidently, a character with the properties I've outlined cannot be described, either. It has some sense of "ineffability" because our minds necessarily understand things through differentiation and parts, and as such are unable to apprehend it as it is. This is to say: There is something there, but we can't really comprehend it.
And with this, it is important to mark the distinction between something being indescribable and something being "nonexistent," because there are many things even in everyday life that are indescribable. For example: Color is impossible to describe. You can easily describe something as "black," but describing the appearance of "blackness" itself is impossible to do, and if a blind person asked you to describe color to them, you'd find yourself at a loss of words. The only way to "describe" a color in any absolute way would be though self-reference. For example, saying "blackness is black." Which, of course, fails to say anything at all.
Yet, I don't think anyone would say color doesn't exist, or anything of the like, because it is something we directly experience and have a sense of. In principle, the same would apply to a Monad: It is not something able to be described in ordinary language, and yet evidently it must exist, due to displaying properties that only existent things can have.
By extension, this means that descriptions being applied to a Tier 0 character doesn't really contradict their Tier 0 rating, either. Consider: Words such as "Above," "outside," "apart" and "higher" are inherently spatial terms. Does this mean that, every time an aspatial thing is described as "Above space," "Outside of space," "Apart from space" or as "A higher realm above space," a contradiction is being made, and the thing in question is in fact not aspatial at all? Of course not.
Why? Because those terms are being used as analogies, and not really in their most proper senses. Something isn't "outside" space in the same way a mailbox is "outside" a house, but it's similar enough that the same word can be used for both. So we apply generalizations of spatial terminology to non-spatial things, and that's not only perfectly fine, but also a feature of language as a whole. In (See?) fact, "In" is a spatial term as well, and yet we don't take issue with phrases like "He exists in a realm with no space or time."
Likewise, "before" is inherently a temporal term, yet we don't take issue with verbiage such as "Before time" being used. No one would remove Beyond-Dimensional Existence from a character just because they're vaguely described as existing "before" something, for instance. "Now" is also a temporal term, and yet no one would remove Beyond-Dimensional Existence from a character if someone said of them: "They are here now."
So, bottom line is: In indexing, we already deal with things that, by definition, defy ordinary language, and as such can really only be described by using terms in an analogous fashion, i.e. generalizing a certain piece of terminology to things outside of its usual scope. This proposal for Tier 0 is no different.
Q: So characters who are indescribable or ineffable would be Tier 0?
A: Short answer: No.
Long answer: As can be seen from the above explanations, ineffability is a
necessary condition for a Tier 0, but it is not a
sufficient one, which is to say: All Tier 0 characters are by necessity beyond description, but not all things beyond description are Tier 0.
For example, as has been explained, the appearance of color is fundamentally indescribable, and yet I don't believe anyone would say colors are Tier 0 because of that. For a more out-there example:
Concepts/predicates can be seen as things for which no definition can be given, yet this is just a matter of the awkwardness of our linguistics, and not necessarily indicative of anything transcendental.
So, no, statements of something being "Indescribable," "ineffable," "incomprehensible," "undefinable" and the like wouldn't amount to much. Granted, sufficiently thorough statements of that sort
may suggest that the character in question is monadic in nature, but those would nevertheless be subject to the definitions and requirements prescribed above, and need to display such qualities.
For example,
Twin Peaks has characters reside on a level stated to be a purely unknowable realm "where all words melt into silence." Yet on their scale there is clearly actual distinction and separation, as well as things above them. As such, they would be unfit for this proposal of Tier 0.
Q: Can there be multiple Tier 0 characters in the same verse?
A: This might seem like a strange question to note down, seeing as I've already established that there can only be one Tier 0 being per verse under these proposals. However, it is worth to note down a distinction between "being" and "character." The latter term refers to narrative presentation and characterization, and the former refers to in-universe ontology.
What I mean is: There may be occasions where two characters or more are presented and characterized separately in terms of the plot and narrative, but are in fact of a single essence/existence as per the verse's cosmology. If their individual characterizations are sufficiently notable, then it might be that they deserve individual profiles, even if ultimately they are the same being.
Q: Is existing beyond logic a Tier 0 feat?
A: Depends entirely on what is meant by "Exists beyond logic." A character operating under
non-classical logic works in ways that defy the usual laws of thought, and as such they can be described as "beyond logic" on that basis. Yet a character who operates on such alternate systems of logic can be any tier. It's not exactly hard to think of Tier 9 characters who exist in paradoxical states of being and the like.
Now, if by "beyond logic," what is meant is that a character exceeds the significance of even basic logical relations such as ">" (Greater than), "<" (Less than) and "=" (Equal to), then in principle that is correct, yes. However, a character, in order to surpass such things, would need to have all the properties I've spoke about thus far, and as such they would need to meet the criteria prescribed by the Tier 0 definition given above. So, it really is just a roundabout way towards things already discussed, ultimately.
Either way, the final answer is: Depends. The statement itself is ambiguous, and as such a random, contextless "Beyond logic" statement wouldn't get anywhere.
Q: Is existing in multiple (Or all) states at once a Tier 0 feat?
A: Not really, no. Lack of differentiation is not "Existing in multiple states at once." And the reasons why are obvious.
Q: Is this definition anything like the old version of Tier 0?
A: Conceptually, it is similar, but otherwise: Not very much, no. Anyone who was present in the 2017-2018 wiki can attest that, back then, "Tier 0" was just a title. Practically speaking, it was just "Qualitative superiority over
1-A + Treated as the verse's supreme being." It reached a point where a well-known fact about Tier 0 was that it didn't actually mean you were stronger than lower tiers: A character who was Tier 0 in one verse could be weaker than
1-As from another verse.
And, quite frankly, this was largely because, back then, no one was well-versed in any of these topics whatsoever, so no one could ever really establish any logical reason, foundation or mechanism that justified Tier 0 being "unsurpassable." Needless to say, this is not the case here: If you don't qualify for Tier 0, then you are weaker than a Tier 0. It's that simple.