From Mount Sumeru to the Big Bang: An Origin Theory via D=∞
Yoshimitsu KatayamaTheYKHC
ABI
Abstract
This paper redefines Mount Sumeru — the axis of Buddhist cosmology — as a physical description of the early universe: the state in which all space was filled with matter, with no gaps, D=∞ (maximum friction), and the dual-layer universe (Koku/Genki) undifferentiated. The Big Bang is reinterpreted as the moment when 'Ma' (interval/gap) was first generated from this D=∞ state, causing the boundary surface (Ki) to emerge and light to begin traveling. This is not a denial of Big Bang theory, but an ontological response to 'why did the Big Bang occur?' — connecting Buddhist cosmology, V=N/D theory, and dual-layer universe theory via the Katayama Equivalence.
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