Reconsidering Cosmic Origin: A Non-Local Introduction of Universal Energy
Description
This paper proposes a conceptually conservative but physically non-trivial reinterpretation of cosmic origin. Rather than treating the Big Bang as a local creation event, it explores the possibility that the universe’s total energy —that is, the axiomatic universal metastructure was already constituted and subsequently became manifest within our cosmological frame through a non-local introduction. By reframing origin as an initial-condition problem rather than a generative process, the work addresses long-standing tensions surrounding energy conservation, entropy asymmetry, and bootstrap-like interpretations of cosmic beginnings. A minimal schematic model is presented to demonstrate formal admissibility without introducing new dynamical laws.
The framework is internally consistent, physically permissible, and deliberately minimal in its assumptions. It does not compete with standard cosmology but reframes the question of origin by separating internal cosmic evolution from the provenance of initial conditions. In a landscape where no experimentally verified theory of absolute beginnings exists, the work situates itself as a disciplined contribution to origin physics—quietly pointing out that if the universe obeys conservation laws after the beginning, it is at least reasonable to ask where those laws expect the beginning itself to belong.
Much like a kid waking up in a bedroom after falling asleep on a couch, the framework suggests that the universe’s present state need not explain how it arrived there—only how it evolves once it does.
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- Is supplemented by
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