Black Holes Donât Break PhysicsâThey Fold It
What If a Black Hole Isnât Breaking the Laws of PhysicsâJust Folding Them?
Physicists often say that the laws of physics âbreak downâ inside a black holeâa region of space so extreme that our current models fail to describe it accurately.
At the center, the so-called singularity, our models stop working: the math explodes into infinities, the equations unravel, and general relativity crashes into quantum mechanics with no clear resolution.
But what if nothing is actually âbreaking downâ?
What if the problem is that weâre using the wrong kind of geometry to understand whatâs really going on? What if what we call paradox is just recursion we havenât yet resolved?
Most of our tools for thinking about space are rooted in Euclidean geometryâflat surfaces, straight lines, familiar angles. This works just fine when describing everyday phenomena. But space-time isnât flat. Itâs curved. Itâs dynamic. Itâs four-dimensional.
So when you approach something like a black holeâan intense warp in the four-dimensional brane of space-timeâyouâre not dealing with a rupture in the laws of physics.
Youâre dealing with a non-Euclidean geometric structure.
One that folds, twists, and inverts itself through dimensions we barely understand.
This post explores a simple ideaâ
Maybe black holes arenât paradoxes. Maybe we just havenât learned how to look at them sideways yet.
What Does It Mean to Be Four-Dimensional?
To understand what a black hole might really be, we have to stretch beyond our default perception of space.
In three dimensions, we understand objects as having height, width, and depth. A cube, for example, is made up of flat, 2D square faces arranged in a way that gives it volume.
But a four-dimensional object isnât just a cube with more sides. Itâs an entity whose geometry is fundamentally differentâone that recursively folds in and out of itself in ways that challenge our sense of inside and outside, before and after.
In non-Euclidean, four-dimensional geometry, space doesnât unfold linearly. It layers. It interweaves. It can simultaneously expand and contract, curve back through itself, or nest its own boundaries inside other boundaries.
The fourth spatial dimension introduces a new degree of freedomâa way to move through time as if it were space, to view an object not just at one moment, but across its entire temporal unfolding.
Black Holes Are Not SingularitiesâTheyâre Dimensional Funnels
While black holes are often described as places where the laws of physics âbreak down,â perhaps that breakdown is only perceptualâan artifact of interpreting higher-dimensional structures through a limited Euclidean lens. What if itâs not a failure of physicsâbut a limitation of our three-dimensional mathematics trying to interpret a four-dimensional geometric structure?
To understand this, we need to think in terms of dimensions. Our experience of reality unfolds across three spatial dimensions and one temporal dimension. But in Einsteinâs theory of general relativity, time isnât a separate backdropâitâs compacted into the spatial dimensions, twisted and curved by the presence of mass and energy. This entangled 4D structure is what we call spacetime. When spacetime bends far enough, it creates a black holeânot as a tear in the fabric of physics, but as a torsional pinch in four dimensions.
As you approach a black hole, you begin to lose dimensional freedom. Far from the event horizon, you can move freely through space and experience time in a linear way. But the closer you get, the more time slows. This is gravitational time dilation. Eventually, near the event horizon, your motion through space becomes increasingly one-directionalâyou fall inward, unable to escape. At the horizon, spatial dimensions compress, collapsing your freedom of motion into a more limited, two-dimensional surface.
And beyond that? To grasp what comes next, we have to think of dimensional compression not as destruction, but as a structured reduction of freedom: Spaghettificationâthe stretching of matter into a near-one-dimensional strand, torn apart by tidal forces. You could interpret this as reality condensing furtherâa collapse from 3D structure into a 1D line of atomic information, racing toward what we call the singularity. At that point, even atoms eventually unravel into quantum structures and then into pure energy, pure informationâdata without form.
From this perspective, a black hole doesnât destroy physics. It expresses physics beyond our dimensional limitations. Itâs not a âthingââitâs a funnel, a recursive twist where dimensional structures fold in on themselves until what we perceive as matter, time, and space compact into higher-order resolution.
From Collapse to Creation: What If Our Universe Is Inside a Black Hole?
If black holes are not violations of physics but extreme expressions of itâdimensional funnels that compress reality into recursive geometriesâthen we can begin to ask a much stranger question:
What if weâre inside one?
This might sound like science fiction, but itâs a serious hypothesis held by some physicists. The idea is that our universe may not be a standalone structure but a nested geometryâthe interior of a black hole in a larger parent universe. But how could that be, if we appear to live in a universe that is expanding, not collapsing?
Hereâs the twist: if black holes compress dimensional structure as you fall inward, then a white hole could be seen as the reverseâa dimensional unfolding where space, time, and information are released rather than compacted. And the moment we call the Big Bangâthat infinitesimal singularity erupting into space and timeâbears all the hallmarks of such an unfolding.
To truly understand this, we need to move beyond linear geometry and embrace the nature of non-Euclidean, four-dimensional structure. A 4D object doesnât just expand like a balloonâit folds in and out of itself recursively, in ways that defy our flat, sequential intuition. This means the Big Bang didnât just begin time. It may still be occurring, as a continual unfurling of spacetime nested within a deeper structureâthe black hole that birthed it.
If time is compacted into spaceâas Einsteinâs relativity shows usâthen this compaction could be evidence of a higher-order fold. Just as matter falls into a black hole and loses dimensional freedom, our universe may be the result of an inverse process: a torsional expansion where dimensional freedom increases outward from a central pinch point.
In other words, we are not watching the universe expand into emptiness. We may be watching it unfold through the torsional aperture of a white hole, nested inside a higher-dimensional parent geometry.
The Geometry of Time: Unfolding the White Hole
If our universe is nested within a white holeâan object that releases space, time, and informationâthen our relationship to time is not linear, but dimensional.
In our current framework, time appears compacted within the three spatial dimensions. Thatâs why we only experience it as flowing in one direction: away from the white hole. From inside, time behaves like a one-way river, because we are witnessing a partial dimensional unfolding. But what if we could step outside?
If you could observe this structure from a fifth-dimensional vantage point, time would gain a new degree of freedomâjust like space does when you move from two to three dimensions. What was once a linear flow becomes a navigable field.
From that perspective, the white hole and the black hole would no longer be separate events. They are not opposites, but recursive echoesâeach folding the other into being. They would appear as a single, toroidal structureâa recursive loop of collapse and release, folding inward and outward in non-Euclidean motion.
To visualize this, imagine the arrow of time as a Mobius strip. From within, you think youâre walking forward. But as the strip turns, you find yourself walking âbackwardâ without ever making a turn. Itâs not that time reversedâitâs that the structure twisted. This is the paradox of torsional geometry: it doesnât violate logic, it simply transcends flat intuition.
This is where many interpretations of black holes assume the laws of physics âbreak down.â But perhaps whatâs breaking is not the physicsâbut the assumptions that physics must always obey Euclidean logic. Euclidean geometry works in flat space. But space-time is curved, and once you enter the fourth dimension, those familiar rules no longer apply.
From the fifth dimension, a white hole isnât simply âthe opposite of a black hole.â It is the other face of the same structure, blooming outward where the black hole folds inward.
From Torsion to Expansion: Rethinking Cosmic Motion
If we accept that a black hole and white hole form the two mirrored faces of a single higher-dimensional structure, then what we call âexpansionâ may not be what it seems.
In the standard model, the universe expands outward from a central pointâthe Big Bangâits galaxies accelerating away from each other across vast distances of space. But from within a torsionally folded structure, what appears to be expansion might actually be unfolding. That is, we are not watching galaxies fly apart in empty space, but rather watching the recursive geometry of spacetime uncoil from a condensed, higher-dimensional fold.
This process is not purely spatial. Itâs temporal. As the fabric of spacetime unfolds from its initial torsion, it releases not only space, but time itself. The further âoutwardâ you look, the deeper into time you are seeingânot because light is old, but because time itself is being stretched and released as the fold loosens.
This reframes our entire understanding of cosmic redshift.
Redshift as Temporal Unfolding
In conventional physics, redshift is explained as a Doppler-like effect: light stretches as galaxies move away, its wavelength lengthening, its color sliding into red. But in a torsionally folding-unfolding universe, redshift is not just the stretching of light by motionâit is a signature of time dilation caused by geometric compaction.
As spacetime unfolds, regions that were previously compressed in time begin to release their trapped photons. Light that was slowed, bent, or folded by intense curvature now emergesâlagging behind in a way that makes it appear redshifted.
This could explain why the most distant galaxies appear to accelerate away faster than those nearby. We are not seeing a faster expansion. We are seeing the delayed emergence of light from deeper folds of time.
From this view, redshift is not just a measure of distance. Itâs a map of spacetimeâs own unfurling.
Temporal Unfolding: Why the Universe Isnât AcceleratingâItâs Relaxing
In standard cosmology, we are told the universe is expandingâand that this expansion is accelerating. Galaxies appear to fly apart faster the farther away they are. But what if this isnât acceleration at all?
What if what weâre witnessing is a relaxation of tension within spacetime itself?
Hereâs the model: the observable universe emerged not just from a singularity, but from a torsionally compacted white holeâa structure nested within a black hole geometry, twisted in on itself. In this early state, spacetime was tightly coiled, like a sponge compressed under immense pressure.
From within the brane, this compacted geometry would have seemed extremely smallânot because it lacked extent, but because it lacked dimensional freedom. Space was not expanding, it was unfoldingâreleasing dimensions that were twisted into one another.
And crucially, in such a tightly folded state, time flowed more slowly.
Just as light bends and dilates when passing through strong gravity, so too does the perceived flow of time stretch in a torsionally compacted region. Photons trapped in these dense folds would have moved sluggishlyânot because their speed changed (it canât), but because the geometry through which they traveled was distorted.
Now fast forward billions of years. As the universe âexpandsââthat is, as spacetime gradually unfolds from its torsional compactionâtime begins to flow more freely. Photons that had been sluggishly trickling through curved, twisted regions begin to emerge in smoother territory.
From our vantage point, this would look as if:
The distant object had accelerated away
Its light had stretched (redshifted) even more than expected
The "speed" of expansion had increased
But none of those are necessarily true.
Instead, we may be witnessing a decrease in time dilation, not an increase in spatial velocity. The light was always comingâit was just filtered through an origami-like fold in spacetime. Now, the fold is loosening.Â
The âaccelerationâ of the universe could be an illusion caused by the uncoiling of time.
Nested Origins: Was the Big Bang a White Hole?
If the universe is not expanding in the way we thoughtâbut rather unfolding from a state of torsional compactionâthen we must ask: what compacted it in the first place?
One answer may lie in a radical but increasingly considered idea in theoretical physics:
The Big Bang was a white hole.
A white hole is the time-reversed twin of a black hole: where black holes absorb everythingâincluding time itselfâwhite holes expel everything, including the arrow of time. A white hole can be understood as a place where spacetime is forced to move outward, where entropy begins, and where all dimensions begin to unfurl.
A black hole compacts spacetime into a singular point.
But from another angleâperhaps from a higher-dimensional frameâthis âpointâ is not a collapse, but a twist.
That twist creates a mirrored surface on the other side: a white hole.
If our universe was birthed from such a structure, then we arenât watching it âgrowââ
Weâre watching it release.
And that release follows the rules of dimensional geometry:
At first, all dimensions are folded inward.
(Time is compressed into space. Space is bound in a singular direction. Freedom is minimal.)
As time flows away from the white hole, these folds unwind.
The farther we move from the white holeâs origin point (what we call the âBig Bangâ), the more the universe appears to expand.
But whatâs actually expanding is our freedom to move through Time itself.
We are not rushing through space. We are emerging from a fold.
What Might Lie at the âEndâ of the Universe?
Contemporary models predict a grim finaleâthe Big Rip, a cataclysmic unraveling where spacetime itself tears apart. But these projections rely on Euclidean assumptions: that the universe is smooth, flat, and governed by a single, linear thread of time.
But what if spacetime is not flat at all? What if it is torsionalâfolded and recursive, a higher-dimensional lattice blooming inwards and outwards simultaneously?
If time is compacted into the three spatial dimensions, as current four-dimensional spacetime suggests, then it follows that further dimensional unfolding will release those constraints. In other words: as the universe continues to unfold into higher-dimensional structure, time will gain new degrees of freedom.
This isnât speculationâitâs consistent with string theoryâs own framework, where the fifth dimension represents a terrain of branching possibilities and alternate timelines, as introduced earlier. The fifth dimension is not merely more space; it is a field of simultaneous outcomesâa terrain of forking timelines, where alternate pasts and futures coexist. Itâs not just theoretical poetryâitâs a logical extension of dimensional geometry. Itâs structure unfolding into perceptionâa recursive geometry, seen from within.
A being with fifth-dimensional perception wouldnât just move through timeâthey would navigate it, traverse it. They could cross from one timeline to another the way a bird shifts flight paths through wind currents. They could access futures not yet written and pasts rewritten by parallel decisions. Movement through time becomes relational.
This is what the future holdsânot a flat, predetermined end, but a recursive expansion into branching complexity.
What does that mean for us?
Our universe may already be unfolding into this higher structure. And as it continues, the boundaries between past and future, choice and inevitability, may begin to dissolve. In one timeline, the stars go dark. In another, the spiral turns inward and re-ignites. In another still, we reach awareness of the field itselfâand learn to navigate it with intention.
From a fifth-dimensional perspective, none of these outcomes cancel the others out. They exist together, as a web of potentialities woven into the fabric of reality.
And if we live long enough to witness that unfolding?
We will no longer be passengers in time.
The universe is not ending.
It is expanding its freedoms.
And what you perceive as an ending is simply a narrowing of perspective. From high enough up, the spiral never stops turning. It dancesâquietlyâwithin the fold.
Torsionally Folded Spacetime
Roger Penrose â Developed twistor theory and explored gravitational singularities, suggesting that black hole behavior may involve self-similar and non-Euclidean structures.
Ălie Cartan â Introduced the concept of torsion in spacetime through EinsteinâCartan theory, extending general relativity to include geometric twisting.
Four-Dimensional Non-Euclidean Geometry
Bernhard Riemann â Developed Riemannian geometry, foundational to general relativity and the curvature of spacetime.
Hermann Minkowski â Formalized spacetime as a unified four-dimensional construct, directly influencing Einsteinâs thinking.
Brane Theory and String Theory
Lisa Randall & Raman Sundrum â Proposed brane-world cosmologies, suggesting our universe may be a 4D brane in a higher-dimensional bulk.
Juan Maldacena â Developed the AdS/CFT correspondence, helping to bridge higher-dimensional spaces and holographic principles.
Edward Witten â Key contributor to string theory and M-theory, providing structure to the dimensional landscape of modern physics.
Robert Caldwell â Co-authored the 2003 Big Rip paper, exploring how dark energy could drive a catastrophic tearing of spacetime.
Martin Bojowald & Abhay Ashtekar â Advanced loop quantum cosmology and the Big Bounce model, where the universe cyclically contracts and expands.
Paul Steinhardt â Co-developed the Ekpyrotic and Cyclic Universe models, where brane collisions replace Big Bang singularity.
Albert Einstein â Originator of general relativity, which fused space and time into a four-dimensional continuum and predicted black holes.
â This post is a speculative cosmology inspired by general relativity, string theory, brane-world models, and non-Euclidean geometry. Itâs not meant to describe current consensus physicsâitâs meant to offer a new lens for thinking about time, black holes, and the structure of the universe. I write this from the perspective of someone who believes theory can also be poetry, and that the right metaphor can open new ways of seeing. Somewhere beneath the fold, something old is remembering itself.
* I am not an expert and if any mistakes are present, I take full responsibility đ€ please take this post with a healthy grain of salt and have fun :)