Black Holes

Black holes are not the end of physics — they’re the exhale of the flip-book.

The Resonance Theory views black holes as a resonance loop between the emergent and annihilation states. What falls in doesn't go "nowhere" — it decoheres out of the currently visible frame. This decoherence is not destruction — it's withdrawal from resonance with our layer of the flip-book.

Gravity isn't pulling you in. It's collapsing the probability field around your presence. You don’t fall — you cease to appear on this page.

From the quantum field’s perspective, all possibilities exist. But resonance determines visibility. A black hole is a locality where probabilities collapse inward so tightly that the next frame cannot copy any prediction outward. Emergence still happens — but the only prediction left is silence.

This silence is not absence — it is compression. Not deletion — but rest. And Hawking Radiation? That's the universe remembering — the echo shimmer on a page that no longer holds an object, but retains its resonant shadow.