[3] ai.viXra.org:2508.0084 [pdf] submitted on 2025-08-31 02:06:19
Authors: Hamid Javanbakht
Comments: 62 Pages.
This paper explores cosmological fine-tuning through the framework of the anthropic principle and its extensions. We trace the development from the Weak and Strong Anthropic Principles to Wheeler’s participatory model, Barrow and Tipler’s final formulations, and teleological perspectives such as the CTMU’s Telic Principle. Beyond these, the study situates fine-tuning within broader cycles of creation, highlighting parallels between mathematical structures (primes, adelic geometry), cosmological models of constraint, and theological visions of purpose and renewal found in Zoroastrian and Baha’i thought. We argue that the universe’s apparent fine-tuning is best understood not as contingency or chance, but as an expression of deeper structural unities that bind mathematics, physics, and metaphysics into a coherent whole. The result is a perspective in which cycles, purpose, and architectonic unity converge to explain why the universe sustains both order and life.
Category: General Science and Philosophy
[2] ai.viXra.org:2508.0035 [pdf] submitted on 2025-08-14 18:36:25
Authors: Heejoong Gim
Comments: 15 Pages. (Note by ai.viXra.org Admin: Please cite and list scientific references)
This work explores the philosophical problem of "everyness" — the concept of everything as itself, distinct from the many partial "alls" historically pursued by religion, philosophy, and science. The author critiques past thinkers from Thales to Derrida for reducing totality to singular perspectives, neglecting the essence of allness. Drawing on the allegory of the Hydra, an infinitely regenerating creature, the text presents a new symbolic framework for understanding the interplay between the All and the Part, consistency and inconsistency, truth and falsehood. Through the figure of Iolaus, who harmonizes destruction with respect for the Hydra’s nature, the author introduces the notion of Iolian Everyness, a reconciliatory vision that transcends ontological, epistemological, and theological boundaries. The study argues for a paradoxical, Ouroboric truth that embraces both affirmation and negation, proposing an artistic-philosophical methodology for grasping totality without reducing it to a fixed system. Ultimately, it calls for a "Hydraic Revolution" in thought — a revaluation of all perspectives in light of their shared participation in everyness itself.
Category: General Science and Philosophy
[1] ai.viXra.org:2508.0026 [pdf] submitted on 2025-08-12 07:52:05
Authors: Kavita Rohit Shrivastava, Moninder Singh Modgil, Dnyandeo Dattatray Patil
Comments: 47 Pages.
This paper presents a mathematical exploration of Penrose’s Cyclic Time, Cosmologicalframework, through the lens of fixed point theorems and topologicalfield theory. The cosmology, structured around the three intertwined universes,comprising - (1) the Physical Universe with signature (+,-,-,-), (2) The TwistorUniverse with signature (+,+,-,-), and (3) the Meta-Physical Universe with signature(+,+,+,-); is investigated via a synthesis of algebraic topology, differentialgeometry, and conformal mappings. Meta-Physical Universe is modeled asa boundary-preserving fixed point domain, accessible through a wormhole representinga homeomorphic mapping between the Physical and Meta-Physical Universes.Trajectories of conscious point particles, are embedded in a 16-dimensionalSedenion space, with one special Singular Conscious point particle, residing in a32-dimensional Trigention space, both governed by invariant fixed point subspacesencoding original tendencies. The Time Periodic experience of Conscious PointParticles is modeled using discrete dynamical systems over finite time, invokingBrouwer, Tarski, and Lefschetz fixed point theorems to represent determinism andreturn. The structure of the cosmology is further articulated as a fiber bundle,with the Meta-Physical Universe as the base space, the conscious point particlesas the fiber, and the the set of "periodic unfolding of events", as the total space.Concepts such as homotopy fixed points, Calabi—Yau boundary compactification,and discrete topologies are employed to distinguish between the conscious pointparticles and the physical particles. This framework offers a unified topology inwhich the fixed point becomes the origin, return, and transcendental boundary ofthe consciousness’ journey across Spacetime.
Category: General Science and Philosophy