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Why Black Holes Dont End the Story: A Regenerative Model for the Cosmos By Richard Lee Crowton Published: August 20, 2025


How Crowton’s Cosmogenic Field Theory (CCFT) redefines black holes as engines of renewal, not singular endpoints.


Why Black Holes Dont End: Introduction

Why Black Holes Dont End

In mainstream physics, black holes are often thought of as cosmic dead ends. They swallow matter, energy, and even information, compressing it all into a singularity where the laws of physics break down.

But in Crowton’s Cosmogenic Field Theory (CCFT), black holes are not the final chapter. Instead, they are regenerative systems that recycle matter and energy back into the cosmos, seeding the birth of new stars, nebulae, and galaxies.

This perspective doesn’t just challenge convention — it offers a new blueprint for cosmic evolution.


The Problem with the “End-Point” Model

  • Traditional views suggest black holes only consume, never create.

  • This leads to unsolved paradoxes:

    • Information loss paradox → what happens to data swallowed by a black hole?

    • Entropy paradox → if entropy always increases, is the universe doomed to heat death?

These problems reveal cracks in the standard picture.


The Regenerative Model

CCFT proposes that black holes are not endpoints, but gateways of transformation.

  • Entropy–curvature feedback builds until the black hole can no longer remain stable.

  • At this threshold, the Transfer Interface Field (TIF) activates.

  • Energy, matter, and information are redistributed into new cosmic structures rather than being lost.

In this way, black holes become cosmic recyclers — essential to the universe’s long-term balance.


Observational Hints

  • JWST has revealed galaxies forming earlier than standard models allow.

  • Gravitational wave echoes hint at structure near black hole horizons.

  • Symmetry in nebulae suggests ordered regeneration, not chaotic collapse.

These signs align with the regenerative black hole model of CCFT.


Everyday Analogy

Think of composting: what looks like decay actually provides the nutrients for new life.

  • Traditional physics sees black holes as “cosmic death.”

  • CCFT sees them as cosmic composters, fuelling the cycle of renewal.


Conclusion

Black holes are not the end of the story. In Crowton’s Cosmogenic Field Theory, they are vital engines of regeneration.

This regenerative model not only solves paradoxes but also offers hope: the universe is not winding down into silence, but continually refreshing itself through the hidden work of black holes.

Regenerative Black Hole – Crowton’s Cosmogenic Field Theory (CCFT)

 
 
 

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