Neither the Big Bang Nor the Galaxies — This James Webb Black Hole Changes Everything
- richardcrowton
- Aug 23, 2025
- 2 min read
This James Webb Black Hole Alters Everything — Not the Big Bang or the Galaxies
For over a century, cosmology has followed a straightforward narrative: the Big Bang initiated the universe, leading to galaxy formation, with black holes seen as the remnants of collapsing stars. However, in 2025, the James Webb Space Telescope has revealed evidence that challenges and expands this understanding.
The Discovery That Shakes the Foundations
Astronomers have identified:
The earliest black hole ever seen — inside the compact galaxy CAPERS-LRD-z9, only 500 million years after the supposed Big Bang, yet already holding a mass tens of millions of times larger than our Sun.
The Infinity Galaxy — a system showing what may be the first direct-collapse black hole, born not from stars, but directly from vast clouds of primordial gas.
These findings don’t just tweak our models — they suggest we’ve been missing something fundamental about how the universe works.
Neither the Big Bang Nor the Galaxies — This James Webb Black Hole Changes Everything - Crowton Theory and the Transfer Interface Field
In my research — published this year as Crowton’s Cosmogenic Field Theory (CCFT) — I proposed that black holes are not singularities, but regenerative gateways. At their core lies what I call the Transfer Interface Field (TIF): a thermodynamic-curvature mechanism that recycles matter and energy, driving cosmic renewal.
Instead of being cosmic “graveyards,” black holes become the engines of galaxy formation. They don’t simply consume; they redistribute and regenerate.
When Webb reveals black holes that are “too massive, too early,” or black holes forming directly from gas clouds, these align naturally with CCFT’s predictions:
Black holes act first, galaxies follow.
Matter flows through regenerative cycles rather than collapsing into oblivion.
Early-universe anomalies (like z>10 galaxies) can be explained without invoking exotic inflationary tweaks or untested constants.
Why This Changes Everything
The Big Bang model has always struggled with timing: how did supermassive black holes, galaxies, and structures appear so quickly? Webb’s discoveries are accelerating this crisis in cosmology.
Crowton Theory offers an alternative: the universe is not a one-time explosion, but an ongoing cycle of collapse, transfer, reformation, and renewal. Black holes are not the end of the story — they are the beginning of the next chapter.
The Road Ahead
Neither the Big Bang Nor the Galaxies — This James Webb Black Hole Changes Everything
We are at a turning point. As more Webb data arrives — and as gravitational-wave observatories like LISA come online — the universe may begin to look far more regenerative than destructive.
For me, the James Webb discoveries are not a surprise — they are a confirmation. I believe history will look back at 2025 as the year we began to rewrite the narrative of the cosmos.
—Richard Lee Crowton
Independent Cosmological Theorist
Founder of Crowton’s Cosmogenic Field Theory (CCFT)


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