A long research paper is how you build structure.
A swarm of sharp articles is how you build inevitability.
That is the strategic genius of BFUT’s publishing model, especially for an independent researcher working outside the usual gatekeeping system.
Most people imagine that if a theory is important, one big paper should be enough. That is almost never true in public intellectual life. One paper may matter for archival seriousness, but public understanding does not spread through a single document. It spreads through entry points.
One person enters through Einstein. Another through the Hubble constant. Another through the balloon analogy. Another through JWST. Another through dark matter skepticism. Another through galaxy orientations. Another through the CMB question. Another through the sheer discomfort of a finite universe boundary.
That means the theory does not need one door.
It needs many.
This is why short focused articles are not a compromise. They are a weapon.
Each article isolates one argument, one contradiction, one visual clue, one failed analogy, one prediction, or one conceptual reversal. Each becomes readable, shareable, discussable, and memorable. Each can be read in a few minutes. Each can be listened to while walking. Each can be posted on Medium, a website, a forum, or a social platform. Each can reach a different type of mind.
And all of them can lead back to the same core paper.
That is how a theory ecosystem is built.
For an outsider theory, this is often stronger than waiting for formal recognition. Institutions move slowly, defensively, and often tribally. Public thought moves differently. If enough people begin encountering the same core idea through different doors, the theory becomes harder to ignore. If simulations are available, if predictions keep being highlighted, if the arguments keep appearing in focused pieces rather than one giant block, the framework begins to gain cultural presence before it gains institutional permission.
That is not a gimmick.
That is often how neglected ideas survive long enough to become impossible to bury.
And BFUT is unusually well-suited for this method because it contains not just one claim, but dozens of sharp sub-arguments, each strong enough to stand as its own article.
The long paper is the spine.
The short articles are the nerves.
And if the nerves reach enough people, the body starts moving.
Download the research paper: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19149786 (doi.org in Bing) Download the simulation code: https://zenodo.org/records/19124510 Watch the simulation work: https://vijayshankarsharma.com/