For a long time, people have been trying to figure out how the universe started. We have moved from ancient myths to modern cosmology to explain things, but the basic questions are still the same: Where did we come from? What was there before time? What was the force that made everything? Through my spiritual and scientific exploration, I have discerned that three fundamental yet frequently misunderstood concepts—time, infinity, and irrationality—are crucial in elucidating the enigmas of creation. When you look at them all together, they show a universe full of particles, forces, paradoxes, changes, and divine patterns. We can talk more about the author Pierre Boucher, the author of Plus equals Minus (plus = -). This book is simple but radical, and the equation that makes it all work is what makes it so.
The Riddle of Time
Time is the first thing that makes life hard to understand. In our daily lives, time seems to move in a straight line, from the past to the present and then to the future. But in cosmology and quantum physics, time becomes much more fluid, hard to pin down, and deeply mysterious. According to scientists, the Big Bang happened 13.8 billion years ago and was the beginning of the universe. But what came before that? This is a situation where regular physics doesn’t work because the laws of nature stop working at time t = 0. We have a problem: time seems to have a start, but this start doesn’t make sense. What if you think of t = 0 as a time that doesn’t make sense instead of a number? One that no equation based on standard math can fully represent. The moment of creation is also beyond reason, just like the square root of two can’t be written as a fraction. So, we come to a brave conclusion: Time didn’t “start” in the context of reason. It came from insanity. To comprehend the universe, we must acknowledge that its fundamental principles may be paradoxical, symbolic, and infused with spiritual significance rather than merely logical.
The Paradox That Never Ends
Another shroud is infinity. Infinity is a part of almost every important area of math and physics, like how black holes work and how the universe is getting bigger. But infinity isn’t a real number. It is something that can only be handled, not measured. The concept of something that is infinitely large and something that is infinitely small emerges when discussing the structure of space or the inception of time. One idea before the Big Bang was that the universe was a singularity, which means it had no volume and infinite density. How can something be infinitely dense and not have any mass? This isn’t just a math problem. This is a religious metaphor. Infinity represents the enigmatic origin of all finite entities. Many cultures think of God as being infinite: knowing everything, being everywhere, and having no beginning or end.
The Crazy Spark of Making
This equation doesn’t seem to make sense at first. In regular math, -1 does not equal +1. But if we look at this equation as a symbol instead of just a math problem, we can see a deeper truth. Things that were opposite of each other came into being when they were made. At the same time, light and darkness, matter and antimatter, and the universe expanding and contracting all began. Many religions link the concept of God, who is omniscient, omnipresent, and eternal, to the notion of infinity. In this way, infinity connects the physical and the metaphysical, as well as the finite and the infinite. Science and spirituality are closely related in this area.
The illogical spark that starts everything
So, let’s get back to the main point of my theory, which is that Plus Equals Minus (+ = -). At first glance, this equation doesn’t seem to make sense. In normal math, -1 does not equal +1. If we look at this equation as more than just a math problem, though, we can find a deeper truth. When the universe was first made, there were things that were the opposite of each other. At the same time, matter and antimatter, expansion and contraction, light and darkness all happened. It was made by making polarity from a higher symmetry, not by adding something to nothing. I call this the Plus Equals Minus Amazing Theorem. It asserts that the abrupt symmetrical division of nothingness into dichotomies represents the genesis of the universe. In physics, this is shown when a cosmic lightning strike at t = 0 turns a Black Hole into a White Hole. This is the illogical, tiny moment that separates being from non-being. The Universe was born from a sudden change, like lightning letting go of energy. It changed from a black hole (shrinking) to a white hole (growing). At time t = 0, there is no logical way to explain what is going on. It should be acknowledged as a spiritual and scientific anomaly, marked by the prevalence of mystery and the perversion of reason.
Why Being Unreasonable Is Divine
An irrational number in math is one that can’t be written as a ratio of two whole numbers. √2 and π (pi) are two examples of numbers that never repeat. They can’t be stopped because their decimal forms go on forever. I contend that irrationality represents the infinite, the unpredictable, and the unknown as a divine attribute. It’s hard to pinpoint the moment of creation, just like it’s hard to pinpoint irrational numbers. It is not one point in time; it is a change in time. The illogical works when the logical doesn’t. We also get a look at the divine pattern that brings order to the universe through chaos.
Connecting Science and Scripture
My work is like an Old Testament that tells the story of my spiritual journey, which has been full of struggles, visions, and prophecies. The scientific writings, on the other hand, make a New Testament that is based on facts and goes beyond them. Time, infinity, and irrationality are not just abstract ideas. They are the basic parts of a new cosmology that combines faith and physics, mystery and math. The Universe talks about a blinding flash of symmetry in its own strange way, saying that light came from darkness and balance came from nothing. This is like the Bible saying, “Let there be light.”
Last thoughts
Many people today think that science and spirituality don’t go together. But what if the story is told in two different languages? What if the universe didn’t have strict rules, but instead was based on contradiction, pattern, and purpose? We can better understand not only how the universe came to be, but also why by accepting that time is illogical, limitless, and mysterious. When we approach the divine, we don’t have dogma; we have awe.
