This article presents a critical–propositional examination of the text Translation-Driven Inflation and Primordial Black Hole Wells: A Unified Geometric Framework for Early and Late Cosmological Acceleration, by David R. Palmer and Breyden Jackson, in confrontation with the Theory of Objectivity (TO). Written from the modal, ontological, and scientific discipline of TO, the study investigates the extent to which the proposal of Translation-Driven Inflation (TDI), together with the late-time cosmological role attributed to primordial black hole wells and geometric backreaction, can be regarded as compatible with, limited by, or partially incorporable into the axiomatic framework of TO. The article argues that Palmer and Jackson’s proposal is theoretically significant because it seeks to explain both primordial and late cosmological acceleration without multiplying fundamental entities such as an inflaton field or a strictly fundamental dark-energy sector. In this respect, the analyzed model is recognized as an important attempt at geometric and thermodynamic unification. At the same time, the study shows that, under the modal discipline of the Theory of Objectivity, the model cannot occupy the place of an ultimate cosmogony, since it presupposes a physically constituted universe—already endowed with plasma, annihilation dynamics, effective geometric terms, and nonlinear structures—rather than addressing the prior ontological conditions of possibility of the universe itself. The article develops this confrontation by articulating the analyzed model with the foundational bibliography of TO, the recent bibliography of TO on modal ontology, empirical contact, testability, convergence zones, and vacuum properties, as well as with support and dialogue authors such as Einstein, Heisenberg, Bohm, Prigogine, Penrose, Hawking, Weinberg, Kuhn, and contemporary observational references linked to the CMB, gravitational waves, and JWST. Special emphasis is placed on the TO concepts of phenomenic elements, Inductive Effects, the cosmogonic theorem, and the cosmological Eras, while also considering the transcendent element as knowledge or information produced in atomic relations and equivalent to atomic radiations. The central conclusion is that Palmer and Jackson’s framework should not be read as an ontological rival to the Theory of Objectivity, but rather as a potentially fertile phenomenic model for derived stages of cosmic manifestation. In this sense, Translation-Driven Inflation may be reinterpreted, under TO, as a phenomenic expression of an induced regime of accelerated exteriorization, while primordial black hole wells may be reread as zones of extreme convergence whose geometric effects remain subordinate to broader modal and informational structures. The article thus proposes a disciplined integration: preserving the heuristic and phenomenological value of the analyzed cosmological framework while reaffirming the ontological primacy of the axioms and cosmogonic architecture of the Theory of Objectivity. Keywords Theory of Objectivity; modal ontology; cosmological acceleration; Translation-Driven Inflation; primordial black holes; geometric backreaction; cosmology; critical-propositional analysis; phenomenic elements; Inductive Effects; cosmogonic theorem; dark energy; inflation without inflaton; convergence zones; philosophy of physics
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Cabannas et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69ca1369883daed6ee095538 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19282666
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