The Event Horizon: Why Light Cannot Escape

Ilexa Yardley
The Circular Theory
2 min readAug 20, 2017

Columbus solved this for us. Horizon is circumference. Zero as a one.

Event horizon. (Photo by Austin Schmid)

Humans are afraid of light and dark. We’d like to explain light and dark, so, we don’t have to be afraid of it. This goes all the way back in time to the origin of the universe (any universe).

Light and dark produce a basic circle. By doing so, they conserve, and, thus, preserve, a basic circle (and vice versa). Yin and yang, and, zero and one.

Therefore, complementarity is the basis for identity (you cannot have light without dark). Duplicity is the basis for a unit (two (not-one) is the basic number in nature). Therefore, 50–50 defines, and determines, everything.

Columbus solved this for us. He proved an event horizon is the circumference (and diameter) of an uber-basic circle. Meaning, light goes around the circle, in order to escape it.

This explains all phase transitions (zero and one is circumference and diameter). From nature’s point of view, there are no phase transitions. From Columbus’ point of view, there are no event horizons.

From a human’s point of view, yin and yang is X and Y (zero and one). You can’t have one without the other (any point of view is dependent, and preserves, the opposing point of view). The sun projects. The moon reflects. It takes two to make one (and, vice versa, one, to make, two).

Conservation of the circle is the core dynamic in nature.

https://www.amazon.com/Virtual-Intelligence-Nature-Conservation-Circle/dp/1974498913/

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