Antigravity as Form-Generating Principle: A Meta-Monist Cosmology of ∇U-Tension
Authors/Creators
Description
This paper proposes a novel cosmological framework grounded in meta-monism, in which antigravity is redefined as the ontological condition for the emergence and persistence of form. Rather than being an exotic repulsive force, antigravity is interpreted as the gradient of ontological tension (∇U) that sustains difference against collapse. In contrast, gravity is reconceived not as attraction, but as the dissipation of structure — the decay of form when ∇U tends toward zero.
Rejecting the Big Bang and expansion hypotheses, the model suggests that matter is continuously born in localized ∇U-equilibrium zones — particularly in voids, halos, and large-scale interstructural regions. Voids are thus reinterpreted as active form-shaping fields, not as passive absences. From atoms to galaxies and black holes, all stable phenomena are shown to obey the same ontological law: the retention of difference through antigravitational tension.
This approach unifies micro and macro scales, eliminates the need for singularities or inflation, and offers testable predictions regarding matter genesis in cosmic equilibrium zones. Antigravity, rather than opposing gravity, is revealed as its hidden ontological foundation — the force that makes form itself possible.
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Additional details
Dates
- Accepted
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2025