What if it's a big collapse not a big bang?
couple things to get out of the way. I have no physic training, I don't have the math to back this up. these are just ideas I've had that I wonder if and where they break down...
I suggest that our universe is nothing more than a black hole, and black holes are nothing exotic other than their event horizon. once past the even horizon it's just normal space. it doesn't act like a funnel. you don't get to singularity. a black hole resembles more of a dinner plate than a funnel, curved on the ends (the event horizon) and normal space everywhere else past the curve. the inside of a black hole just looks like the outside of a black hole. just space. our universe is special only because we can't get past our event horizon.
the idea of the big bang doesn't sit well with me. we've never witnessed a big bang. But we have witnessed a collapse. so I suggest that our universe was created when a structure collapsed. the background radiation that exists everywhere in our universe with slight fluctuations could just be the heat created from the friction from the collapse.
Also, they say our universe is currently expanding... well what happens when black holes feed? they get bigger. perhaps if we were to live long enough we may see the universe stop expanding because it has exhausted whatever it's eating. I don't think I agree with the big crunch idea either. I think Hawking radiation, if I'm understanding the idea right, is probably what happens and the reason black holes evaporate, which is essentially the event horizon walls coming down, no more "universe" just back to unfenced off space
all black holes are are fences within fences. same normal space just multiple fences outside and inside other fences. the only thing that become ridiculous is actually how big space actually is. does it go on forever? is there a geometry to it or is space just what "nothing" is, which means there is no such thing as nothing?
Also, they say that when our universe was created it expanded faster than light, but if the structure that collapsed into a black hole was larger than a light year in circumference wouldn't it just look like it expanded faster than light?
thanks for reading. I hope it's not completely asinine.