14.1 No Big Bang

In the standard narrative of modern cosmology, the universe began with a bang. About 13.8 billion years ago, all matter and energy were squeezed into an infinitely small singularity, then suddenly—bang! Time and space were born, and the universe began expanding like a balloon.
This is a stunning story, but it has a fatal flaw: it implies the universe is an event happening “here and now.”
In our geometric reconstruction, this story is completely rewritten.
If we stand from the God’s-eye view of Hilbert space, there was no Big Bang at all.
That state vector called the “cosmic terminal object” did not explode. It neither grew larger nor smaller. According to Axiom A1, it is only rotating.
In that high-dimensional noumenal world, everything is silent. No fireball, no sound waves, only pure, constant evolution rate .
Then, what is the “Big Bang” we observe?
It is the observer’s boot-up moment.
It is the instant when the observer, as a “seed,” first opens its projection screen. At that moment, massive information streams flood into a low-dimensional coordinate system not yet unfolded. For the observer, this looks like “creation from nothing,” like space rapidly expanding.
But in reality, it is only data decompression.
The universe has not physically grown larger; we are reading more information. Redshift is not galaxies flying away, but the geometric perspective effect we see when tracing back the historical horizon.
We are not living in the debris of an explosion; we are living in a massive program that is running. And the so-called beginning of time is merely the logical moment when that program counter resets to zero.