Black Holes as a Metaphysical Concept
Abstract:
Without getting into detailed elaboration, the black hole phenomenon is derived from the end of the life-cycle of a massive star. A star of sufficient mass that has aged to the point at which its energy core has decayed into denser elements—will collapse under its own weight (gravity). What occurs beyond its surface is a matter of supreme speculation. We are dealing with a cosmic event of such extreme proportions (extreme gravity, velocity, momentum) that we can only surmise what occurs beyond the black hole’s external surface or event horizon.
How utterly dense does the collapsing, contracting star get? How gradually or instantaneously–is another related matter. Does the gravitational force of the massive contracting star, which must be rising exponentially in intensity—begin to approximate the gravitational quantity of the entire universe? We are, after all, dealing with mass and gravity on an astronomical scale.
These contracting stars may be the driving impetus behind so many adjacentlyderived universes. The tremendous gravitational momentum of the collapsing star, could be said to rip the fabric of spacetime, from which is derived the impetus for genesis of new life and forms. The collapsing stars (covered up from our external point of view by the ‘black hole’ event horizon) would be responsible for the quantum fluctuations engendering novel universes. By quantum fluctuations we are simply referring to the waves of radiant energy offset by the collapsing star which could cause new life in novel dimensions of spacetime. The collapsing stars, with their implosion, would direct the energy or quantum fluctuations like an orchestra conductor in the grand symphony of genesis. In a universe which is all one circular continuum, the very small or particle-wave scale feeds into the macro scale; one is sustained by the other.