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By C. Rich
Project DOI
https://orcid.org/0009-0007-6541-3905
In the world of science, ideas must evolve or be replaced by something sharper. For author C. Rich, that evolution has led to the retirement of an earlier concept called “Lava-Void Cosmology.” While that model laid the groundwork, it has now been superseded by a more elegant successor: Cosmological Pangaea.
If the previous theory was like a rough sketch, Cosmological Pangaea is the high-definition masterwork. It shifts our focus away from “fluids” and “voids” and places it squarely on the most fundamental rule of the universe: Entropy.
The Perfect Beginning: A State of Zero
Most people hear “The Big Bang” and imagine an explosion of chaos. Cosmological Pangaea proposes the exact opposite. It suggests that the universe started in a state of Zero Entropy.
Imagine a perfectly organized, finite “primordial configuration.” In this state, there was no disorder, no “mess,” and no curves in the fabric of space (what scientists call “vanishing Weyl curvature”). It was a single, perfectly ordered unit, a cosmological “Pangaea.”
The “Big Bang” wasn’t just an explosion; it was a fracturing. Like a perfect crystal shattering, this initial break created the first ripples of disorder. This fracture set the “arrow of time” in motion, ensuring that entropy would grow steadily from that moment on.
Entropy Corridors: The Guardrails of Reality
Why does this matter to us? Because that initial fracturing created what C. Rich calls Hierarchical Entropy Corridors.
Think of these as the “rules of the road” for everything that exists. From atoms to galaxies to human beings, nothing can survive if it becomes too messy (high entropy) or too frozen (zero entropy). Cosmological Pangaea explains that the structures we see in the sky today, the stars, the planets, and the vast “Cosmic Web”, are the survivors. They are the pieces of the original Pangaea that managed to stay within these corridors.
The Cosmic Sailor and the Black Hole Drains
This new framework also introduces more “fun” ways to think about the deep dark of space. Because the universe is filled with these flowing currents of entropy, an advanced enough civilization wouldn’t need to fight against the universe to travel through it.
Instead, they would become Cosmic Sailors, riding the “entropy currents” created by the growth of space itself. In this map, Black Holes aren’t just scary traps; they are the “drains” of the universe. They are spots where entropy is at its highest, acting like navigational nodes or anchors in the vast, flowing landscape of the cosmos.
A Unified Vision
By moving from “Lava-Void” to “Cosmological Pangaea,” we gain a much clearer picture of our origins. We started as a perfect, zero-entropy point. We fractured into a complex, beautiful mess. And now, we navigate the “corridors” left behind.
This isn’t just about math or physics; it’s about understanding the universal selection process that allowed us to exist in the first place. The “Lava” has cooled, the “Void” has been mapped, and the era of the Cosmological Pangaea has begun.



