Seems unlikely.  What are the chances that the funky thing that the
equations suggest existed at the very birth of the universe (the
singularity) bears a logical relationship to something that exists in
our present, observable universe (black holes)?

I think the more interesting question is, are some things beyond human
understanding, because of the limits of our brain structure, or is
nothing beyond eventual human understanding?  In other words, is it
conceivable that in 10,000 years we'll have a decent intuitive
understanding of what it could mean for there to be something when
there was nothing and what it means for something to exist in a world
without time, etc. etc.  Or are these simply mind-blowing concepts to
such an intrinsic extent that they will continue to blow the minds of
every human forever?

Or do you think it blows my mind simply because I haven't become
expert with the equations, and that if I had, it would just make sense
to me from the mathematics...

On Aug 26, 8:20 pm, gruff <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hmmm.  What if our big bang were the result of the other side of a
> black hole.  And what if each black hole in our universe were in
> reality a path through to a big bang that creates another universe?
> Would this require multidimensional fractals to resolve?
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