String Theory and Such
A couple thoughts: I was watching The Screen Savers the other night, and they had a physicist talking about string theory and his new book. Leo Laporte mentioned that they (the physicists) were searching for "echoes of the Big Bang". You want to see echoes of the Big Bang? Look out the window. Everything (and I mean EVERYTHING) is an echo of the Big Bang.
One of the concepts in String Theory is that the universe is made up of "strings," tiny filaments with unique vibrations. The vibration of each string determines what subatomic (or maybe sub-subatomic) particle the string represents. In essense, a string (or more likely a set of strings, they're REALLY tiny) could be vibrating in one way, causing it to "be" an electron; and the very same string(s) could have a different vibration, with the effect that it's a boson.
So, it's not the strings that are important, it's the vibration. (It's not the singer, it's the song.) Strings are merely the medium that carries the universe. The universe itself is the tune that is reverberating on the strings, from the one Big Note that was plucked on them at the beginning of time.
What if it's a bounce?
Okay, sorry. That was a cryptic question. The previous paragraph reminded me of another theory I've been working under, concerning the structure of the universe on a "macro" scale. It's from something I read in "A Brief History Of Time" by Stephen Hawking. The idea is that the mass behind the event horizon of a black hole doesn't have to be concentrated at the singularity to have enough gravitational distortion to create said event horizon. It was also mentioned that the universe in which we live has sufficient average mass per volume to be within a black hole. That put the idea in my head: Take a black hole and all the mass it collects from its formation to the end of time, take those four dimensions and turn them inside out, placing the "shell" of the event horizon at the beginning of the timeline, and all the mass falls "out" into the expanding universe. The "underside" of the event horizon is basically the Big Bang of another universe.
So. How do I reconcile the string theory I started this post off with, with the "universes are black holes in other universes" theory? Okay, maybe the mass falling in to a black hole builds up a lot of energy and maybe the stress of turning at right angles to the old home universe (causing all the strings that ever intersect with the event horizon to appear at one instant and at one point) causes enough of a primal vibration to make a unified field and a Big ass Bang! (Maybe?)
These are the things that go through my head on a daily basis.
What has this to do with magic and paganism? That's coming soon.