Its impossible to ever know whats beyond this horizon boundary. similarly,black hole event horizons share this property of not being able to know about the future state of objects that fall inside.
Similarly. That’s exactly what I was thinking. I mean, we can see a resolution of within 300000 years of the creation of the Universe, or something like that. That too, becomes a sort of an event horizon. I’m not saying this is the case, but it kind of rhymes if we were within some sort of bubble on “the other side” of a supernova resulting in a black hole. I mean, even by our own physics, matter is energy, and energy cannot be destroyed only transformed. So, it could be that, in my mind, the Big Bang was an “inverted supernova/black hole” event. I think someone called it a “white hole”. But again, I’m just completely speculating, but it’s super interesting to me as someone who just has a passion for learning and understanding and trying to figure out things myself based on the tremendous works of all the giants upon whose shoulders I stand and squint at the horizon!
Edit:
A cosmologist would say they are different phenomenon but from an information-theoretic perspective these are fundamentally indistinguishable Riemann manifolds that share a very unique property.
I don’t know exactly what you just said, but I understood PERFECTLY what you just said.
Edit{2}:
They are geometric physically realized instances of uncomputability which is a direct analog of godelian incompleteness and turing undecidability within the universes computational phase space.
I am amazed that I understand what you are saying.
Edit{3}:
The universe is a finite computational system with finite state system representation capacity of about 10^122 microstates according to beckenstein bounds and Planck constant. If an area of spacetime exceeds this amount of potential microstates to represent it gets quarantined in a black hole singularity so the whole system doesnt freeze up trying to compute the uncomputable.
Did you write this, genuinely? It is pure poetry such that even Samurai would go “hhhOooOOooo!”.
And it is so interesting, because, what you are talking about sounds a lot like computational constraints of the medium performing the computation. We know there are limits in the Universe. There is a hard limit on the types of information we can and cannot reach. Only adds fuel to the fire for hypotheses such as the holographic Universe, or simulation theory. But for me, personally, I believe that at some point our own language breaks down because it isn’t quite adapted to dealing with these types of questions, as is again in some sense reminiscent of both Godel and quantum mechanics, if you would allow the stretch. It is undeterminability that is the key, the “event horizon” of knowledge as it were.
Similarly. That’s exactly what I was thinking. I mean, we can see a resolution of within 300000 years of the creation of the Universe, or something like that. That too, becomes a sort of an event horizon. I’m not saying this is the case, but it kind of rhymes if we were within some sort of bubble on “the other side” of a supernova resulting in a black hole. I mean, even by our own physics, matter is energy, and energy cannot be destroyed only transformed. So, it could be that, in my mind, the Big Bang was an “inverted supernova/black hole” event. I think someone called it a “white hole”. But again, I’m just completely speculating, but it’s super interesting to me as someone who just has a passion for learning and understanding and trying to figure out things myself based on the tremendous works of all the giants upon whose shoulders I stand and squint at the horizon!
Edit:
I don’t know exactly what you just said, but I understood PERFECTLY what you just said.
Edit{2}:
I am amazed that I understand what you are saying.
Edit{3}:
Did you write this, genuinely? It is pure poetry such that even Samurai would go “hhhOooOOooo!”.
And it is so interesting, because, what you are talking about sounds a lot like computational constraints of the medium performing the computation. We know there are limits in the Universe. There is a hard limit on the types of information we can and cannot reach. Only adds fuel to the fire for hypotheses such as the holographic Universe, or simulation theory. But for me, personally, I believe that at some point our own language breaks down because it isn’t quite adapted to dealing with these types of questions, as is again in some sense reminiscent of both Godel and quantum mechanics, if you would allow the stretch. It is undeterminability that is the key, the “event horizon” of knowledge as it were.