Paradise Found - Through a Black Hole.

Matt Brown proves, beyond all doubt, that the afterlife awaits us inside a black hole. But how do we get there?

by Matt Brown, 28 February 2007

Image: Wikipedia Gravitational distortions from a black hole in front of the Large Magellanic Cloud (artist's depiction). Could heaven lie therein?

There are many questions for which science does not have an answer. For a subset of these questions, such as “Is there a god?” we’re told that science shouldn’t even be asking, and everyone would be very much obliged if it would mind its own business, thank you very much. Which is a crushing pity, as these are precisely the questions we really want to know the answers to.

But Inkling is a brash young publication, with a sassy swagger and a shiny white labcoat as-yet untarnished by the slings and arrows of outrageous criticism. Which is why the editors have approved publication, without peer review, of the following groundbreaking theoretical research. To whit, the author presents the case that Heaven resides beyond the event horizon of a black hole.

The Christian Heaven, and other flavors of theistic afterlife, are often described as places outside of space and time, existing at the end of a long dark tunnel. Not unlike a black hole, then. And a little gedanken experiment suggests that this might be no coincidence.

First, we must imagine somebody so pious that there is no question of his soul rising to heaven upon death. Step forward the Pope, who being God’s infallible representative on Earth, is unlikely to cause much of a queue at the Pearly Gates while St. Peter checks his credentials.

Assumption 1: The Pope’s soul must go to Heaven.

Next, we place the Pope in the vicinity of a black hole. When he’s looking the other way, we playfully nudge him beyond the event horizon. Thus ensnared, the pontiff will be squeezed by gravitational forces as he begins his inexorable spiral towards the singularity. His death is assured.

Assumption 2: Nothing can escape from a black hole, not even the papal soul.

Taking Assumptions 1 and 2 together, the only self-consistent outcome is that Heaven must be within the event horizon of the black hole, and most persuasively at the singularity itself. Unless he pulls some kind of clever trick with Hawking radiation, whereby black holes can leak matter/energy, there’s no way his holiness’s spirit can escape. So for his soul to reach heaven, heaven itself must be inside the black hole.

Fairly watertight logic, I hope you’ll agree. Of course, this raises all kinds of interesting questions. The nearest black hole is more than a thousand light-years away, so do departed souls take more than a millennium to reach the Great Hereafter, or do they somehow break the light-speed barrier? Perhaps we each carry a micro-black hole around in our heads, which would itself raise questions about the cause and nature of consciousness. Could this be a whole new branch of research, to be known as biocosmological theology?

