IX. What Happened Before the Big Bang?
In the philosophy of Pramu, this question does not begin with what is visible, but from the opposite direction—from what is unseen. Throughout history, humans have explored reality beginning with Mi and Ra: dimension and energy. From fire, to the discovery of atoms, the invention of nuclear weapons, and the probing of black holes and singularities. Then came theories of spacetime, multiverse, electromagnetic waves, the internet, and the laws of physics. Only recently have humans begun to understand data and law—through algorithms, quantum computers, and quantum teleportation. The pattern is clear: Ra Mi La Al—energy and form first, followed by law and data.
But in Pramu’s philosophy, the direction is reversed. What comes first is not dimension and energy, but Al La Mi Ra—data, law, dimension, and energy. Everything visible is simply a result of deeper structures that are invisible. So when people ask, "What happened before the Big Bang?"—Pramu's philosophy answers: Black Fabric.
Black Fabric is the term used in Pramu's philosophy to refer to the deepest, earliest reality before the creation of the universe. This concept parallels Lauhul Mahfudz in Islamic belief, though Pramu only recognized this connection in 2025. The concept of Black Fabric had been with him since childhood—through visions in dreams of a dense black substance behind a river or veil of reality. A presence beyond space and time, where all decrees and information of the universe are stored.
In this view, Black Fabric exists at dimension zero—not space, not time, not matter. Dimension zero does not mean emptiness, but a state that is limitless and uncountable. Traditionally, zero is understood as “nothing.” But in Pramu’s philosophy, zero is pure potential—a place where emptiness is content, and content is emptiness. It is not bound by space or time. It is infinite, while human life exists in three finite dimensions.
From the Black Fabric arise Al (data) and La (law). These give rise to Mi (dimension) and Ra (energy). From data and law, the structure of existence emerges, flowing into various dimensions until it becomes the universe we now inhabit.
Pramu’s philosophy aligns with quantum field theory, which states that particles are not fixed entities, but excitations of invisible fields. In this model, law and data are fundamental. Even in quantum mechanics, the existence of particles is described through probabilistic wave functions, which become real only upon observation. This suggests that reality itself depends on information and the rules that govern it.
Stephen Hawking, in his study of black holes, showed that information is never lost—even in singularities. The event horizon preserves information in two-dimensional patterns, known as the holographic principle, as if our three-dimensional reality is a projection of information encoded on its surface.
String theory and M-theory propose that fundamental particles are not points, but vibrations of one-dimensional strings existing in more than three dimensions. These vibrations carry data and obey specific laws. This mirrors Pramu’s view that Al and La are the foundational elements of all manifestations of existence.
In short, Pramu’s philosophy asserts that before the Big Bang, reality was not empty. It was a hidden structure containing data and law within the Black Fabric. Everything we now observe—stars, space, time, even consciousness—is an expression of information and law that existed long before time began. And if one believes in divine will, then behind the Black Fabric lies a consciousness—not physical, not three-dimensional, but beyond all forms and measures.
In this view, the universe we inhabit is not outside the Black Fabric, but within it. When we observe black holes and formulate theories of singularity, we tend to think of them as parts of the universe. But in Pramu's philosophy, it is the reverse: our universe surrounds and originates from the singularity. What we call the universe is an expansion of space from a center that lies beyond space and time—at the heart of the Black Fabric itself.
In the next section, Pramu will elaborate on the meaning of black holes—not as the end of everything, but as windows into the fundamental geometry of existence.
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