
This paper presents a critical ontological analysis of the logical foundations of thePenrose Singularity Theorem. It demonstrates that the theorem’s profound conclusion—the generic inevitability of spacetime singularities—is not a discovery about nature butthe necessary consequence of a prior, uncorrected category error in the very formulationof classical general relativity. The error originates in the Hilbert action principle, whichtreats the constant π as a primordial, geometric a priori seed within the gravitational coupling 1/(16πG). This constitutes an ontological inversion, as mathematical evidence (exemplified by Ramanujan’s series for 1/π) establishes π as an emergent, number-theoreticconstant, not a foundational primitive.The work traces how this “π-seed error” corrupts the deductive hierarchy: it renderssingular spacetimes variationally admissible within the classical framework. The PenroseTheorem, by taking the resulting Einstein field equations as its foundational premise,inherits this error. Its rigorous logic thus correctly deduces the inevitability of singularitieswithin the confines of this flawed ontology.The analysis then applies the necessary correction by replacing the primordial πwith the pre-geometric Mahapatra Topological Control Invariant (∆). This leads tothe Mahapatra-Hilbert action, wherein the gravitational coupling is defined by a finite,topologically fixed function κ(∆). Within this corrected action, singular configurationsare variationally excluded ab initio; they cannot be stationary points and are thereforeabsent from the physical solution space.Consequently, the Penrose Singularity Theorem is shown to be internally consistenyet ontologically hollow. It does not describe a fundamental truth of physics but a “mirageof inevitability”—a phantom reality generated by and contained within the mathematicalstructure of an initial category error. The resolution to the singularity problem thus liesnot in quantizing gravity but in rectifying the classical action principle at its axiomatic root.
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