The Fatal Paradox of Classical Physics in Black Holes

The Fatal Paradox of Classical Physics in Black Holes formulates one of the deepest and least acknowledged contradictions in classical black-hole physics: the “singularity of the parts.” General relativity predicts that an event horizon forms at the Schwarzschild radius, and that every material element inside must reach the singularity in finite proper time. But once the horizon exists, no extended body can remain coherent across the interior region. Each “part” of the collapsing object follows its own causal destiny toward r = 0, destroying the notion of a continuous body long before reaching the central singularity. This produces an ontological discontinuity inside classical GR: the theory preserves the metric mathematically, but destroys the physical category of “matter” needed to interpret that metric. The interior of a black hole cannot contain an extended object, cannot preserve simultaneity of its parts, and cannot maintain relativistic invariance. The collapse becomes undefined as a physical process, even though the equations remain formally valid. The work shows that GR offers no continuous macroscopic state between the event horizon and r = 0—only a collection of worldlines that terminate independently. The standard narrative “the star contracts until it becomes a point” is physically impossible, because the star ceases to exist as a body before the singularity is reached. The paper then explains how this paradox is resolved in Quarkbase Cosmology: by replacing the empty interior with a continuous plasmatic ether medium (Ψ-field) that preserves global coherence, halts collapse at a finite radius, and removes the singularity entirely. This reinterpretation restores physical continuity and turns the black-hole interior into a well-defined state of confined etheric pressure.

DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17716912

Date: Nov 18, 2025

Author: Carlos Omeñaca Prado
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0009-0001-9750-5827

Resource type: Preprint
Publisher: Zenodo
License: CC BY-SA 4.0 International

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