The Myth of the Big Bang
Why Creation Is Not an Explosion
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We are told the universe began with an explosion.
A single moment. A burst of energy. The beginning of everything.
But what if that picture is incomplete?
In The Myth of the Big Bang, Clayton Louis Turnage takes readers beyond the popular explosion narrative and into the deeper structure of modern cosmology. Drawing from general relativity, quantum mechanics, black hole physics, and information theory, this book challenges the assumption that the Big Bang represents the absolute origin of reality.
The standard model of cosmology describes expansion from a hot, dense state. It does not require that existence emerged from nothing.
This book explores:
• Why the Big Bang is not an explosion in space
• The limits of singularities in general relativity
• Cyclic and bounce cosmologies
• The black hole information paradox
• The holographic principle and conservation of information
• Whether reality may be fundamentally informational
Rather than rejecting science, this work takes it seriously — and follows it to its conceptual edges.
At those edges, a new possibility emerges:
Creation may not be a one-time event.
It may be a transformation.
A phase transition.
A reconfiguration of information.
Bold yet disciplined, speculative yet grounded in contemporary physics, The Myth of the Big Bang invites readers to reconsider what we mean by “beginning.”
If information is never destroyed, perhaps reality does not erupt into being.
Perhaps it renews itself.
alternatives to the big bang theory
cyclic universe cosmology
black hole information paradox
cosmology and quantum gravity
holographic principle explained
universe before the big bang
informational universe theory