In the 20th century, institutionalized science embraced the concept of a Universe dominated by invisible forces and entities. We are told that at the core of every large galaxy is a supermassive black hole, a region which is said to have such an intense gravitational field that nothing can escape, not even light. The concept of the black hole is thought to account for the stupendous energies and mass at galactic cores. In our own celestial neighborhood, we are told that the outer reaches of the solar system is a never-seen, spherical cloud of icy bodies known as the Oort Cloud, from which most long-period comets supposedly originated.
Of course, these concepts are the products of a cosmology in which gravity is the predominant force. Today, Thunderbolts colleague Nicholas Sykes discusses the tenability of both black holes and the Oort cloud in the light of science discovery, and he explores some of the theoretical alternatives in an Electric Universe.
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