Read STB Theory
A geometry-first model of matter, forces, and memory.
STB Theory claims that:
- • matter is not fundamental — curvature is
• particles are stable geometric structures
• atoms are nested spacetime bubbles
• forces emerge from curvature interactions
• memory is stored as persistent curvature patterns
INTRODUCTION
Universes Within Universes
Most of us grow up believing we are small.
A tiny creature
on a tiny planet
orbiting a tiny star
in a galaxy that is only one among trillions.
We feel insignificant —
a brief flicker
in a vast, indifferent cosmos.
But that story is incomplete.
Spacetime Bubble Theory reveals a startling truth:
We are not small.
We are built from universes within universes —
not separate cosmoses, but nested, self-contained systems of structure and motion.
Inside your body —
inside every cell —
inside every atom —
exist structures as complex
and as numerous
as the galaxies above you.
We are suspended between two infinities:
• the infinitely large
• the infinitely small
And at both extremes,
the same rules apply.
We tend to look up at the stars
and feel small.
But look down —
into the atoms inside you —
and you will find wonders just as vast.
Scale is an illusion.
The pattern repeats:
• galaxies form clusters
• stars form systems
• planets form environments
• life forms networks
• cells form structures
• molecules form matter
• atoms form curvature bubbles
Zoom out far enough, and you see universes.
Zoom in far enough, and you see them again.
To grasp the scale of reality, imagine counting objects one at a time.
If you observed one star every second, it would take over 3,000 years just to see the stars in our own galaxy.
To observe the stars in the entire observable universe, it would take hundreds of trillions of years — far longer than the universe has existed.
Now consider the inward direction.
A single human body contains roughly 10²⁷ atoms.
If you counted one atom per second, it would take tens of quintillions of years to finish.
When we look outward, we encounter vast numbers of stars, planets, and moons — likely on the order of 10²⁴ to 10²⁶ major objects.
When we look inward, we find even more fundamental structures within ourselves.
These numbers are not identical.
But they are surprisingly close in scale.
Both directions confront us with the same reality:
immense complexity built from countless stable structures.
In Spacetime Bubble Theory, this reflects a single underlying principle:
When you look at your hand, you see one object.
In reality, you are seeing the coordinated behavior of hundreds of trillions of trillions of atoms — each a tiny structure governed by the same geometry that shapes stars and galaxies.
Curvature builds reality by nesting stable structures at every scale — inward and outward, without limit.
We are not small.
We are living intersections of two infinities.
We do not live at the edge of reality.
We live at the center of two infinities —
where the universe looks back at itself.

