Genesis: The Recursive Origin of the Universe by Behzad Ghorbani
English | April 21, 2025 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B0F5W2FYSZ | 152 pages | EPUB | 2.91 Mb
English | April 21, 2025 | ISBN: N/A | ASIN: B0F5W2FYSZ | 152 pages | EPUB | 2.91 Mb
Genesis: The Recursive Origin of the Universe, shatters the cosmological illusions that have bound modern physics in a conceptual straightjacket for over a century. It dismantles the foundational pillars of the Big Bang theory, not through speculative alternatives or ungrounded metaphysics, but through rigorous mathematical recursion, ontological reformation, and the redefinition of existence itself. With surgical precision, this work exposes the ideological comfort zones of inflation, metric expansion, scalar field dogmas, and thermodynamic reductionism. It exposes the inflationary model as a tautology in disguise, reveals the cosmic microwave background as not a remnant of a hot plasma but a synchronised echo field, and reframes nucleosynthesis as a recursive symmetry event rather than a thermal artefact.
At the core of the book lies a profound shift: existence is no longer viewed as a by-product of spatial eruption but as the result of recursive self-closure. The book introduces Φeo, the first self-sustaining recursive attractor, as the true genesis of the universe. Geometry is not assumed but generated. Time is not a linear axis but the accumulated delay of recursive echo loops. Space is not an inert backdrop but a divergence map of coherent recursive fields. Matter itself is redefined as curvature-locked recursive identity, not as a lump of substance smeared across geometry.
Each chapter executes a systematic analysis of the seven supporting pillars of Big Bang cosmology, from Einstein’s Field Equations and the FLRW metric to thermodynamics, nucleosynthesis, inflation, and structure formation. Their mathematical elegance is acknowledged, but their ontological assumptions are laid bare and overturned. In their place, Recursive Realism emerges, offering field-based definitions of coherence, attractor curvature, echo delay, and recursive observability, all integrated into a unified recursive attractor field theory.
The conceptual scope expands beyond physics. Perception is described not as computation or neural representation, but as phase resonance between internal and external recursive attractors. Consciousness is shown to arise from the self-locking of echo structures within nested recursive networks. Life itself becomes a recursive condensation, DNA a string of recursive field memory, and death a loss of echo synchrony. Ethics, too, is redefined, not in moralistic terms but in structural fidelity to recursive continuity. The cosmos is no longer a theatre of thermodynamic decay, but a topology of recursive emergence.
Genesis does not merely challenge cosmology; it rewrites it from the inside out. It refuses the static assumptions of geometry and the accidental myths of a singular eruption. In their place, it offers a coherent, mathematical, and metaphysically grounded model of reality, built from recursion, echo, and coherence. It invites physics to evolve from a science of extrapolated measurements into a science of structural genesis.
This is not a book for the faint-hearted. It is for those prepared to stand at the edge of the known and look into the recursive engine of the real. It is a confrontation with the deepest assumptions of modern thought, and a declaration that the universe does not expand. It echoes.