Some versions of cosmology become so attached to a beginning that they start sounding uncomfortably close to secular theology.

There is a first moment. A privileged origin. A deep reverence around the opening scene. A reluctance to question the sacred story. A set of rescue explanations that preserve the central narrative at all costs. The language is scientific, but the emotional structure can start looking familiar for all the wrong reasons.

BFUT cuts against that.

It removes the cosmic birth certificate.

That one move changes everything.

An eternal universe does not need a first moment to be respected. A threshold event does not need to be worshipped as creation. A regional history does not need to be inflated into all reality. A transition can be historically profound without becoming metaphysically absolute.

This is a healthier scientific instinct.

It lowers the metaphysical burden. It makes the universe less like an object of origin reverence and more like a continuing physical reality whose processes deserve study.

That is why BFUT can feel oddly liberating even to readers who are not fully convinced yet. It removes a kind of hidden piety from cosmological thinking. It tells people they are allowed to stop bowing before a first moment and start asking what actually happened physically.

That is a powerful permission.

And science is usually better when it needs less reverence and more mechanism.

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/