This article presents a critical–propositional examination of S. Mahlyankin’s ChronoShell Framework (v3.2): Multidimensional Time as the Foundation of Physical Reality in confrontation with the Theory of Objectivity (TO). The study investigates whether the proposal of multidimensional time as the ontological basis of physical reality can be integrated into a modal-axiomatic framework grounded in the Seven Absolute Truths of TO. The paper argues that Mahlyankin’s model is highly relevant as a cosmological and philosophical interlocutor because it rejects the sufficiency of observable space, proposes a deeper order prior to the empirical world, and assigns a central role to information, temporal structure, and geometric emergence. In this respect, the article identifies important areas of compatibility with the Theory of Objectivity, especially regarding anteriority to the observable, hierarchical composition, the importance of boundaries, the reinterpretation of gravity and dark matter, and the possibility of connecting deep ontology with phenomenic manifestation. At the same time, the article contends that the ChronoShell Framework remains under decisive modal tension. Although conceptually fertile and rich in speculative power, its central postulates are not demonstrated as logically necessary in the strict sense required by the modal discipline of TO. The analysis therefore distinguishes between the explanatory reach of a deep cosmological hypothesis and the stronger requirement of ontological necessity. The article also articulates the dialogue with the foundational bibliography of the Theory of Objectivity, its recent developments in modal ontology, testability, vacuum studies, emergent gravity, and operational bridges, as well as with broader references from Einstein, Heisenberg, Bohm, Prigogine, Penrose, Hawking, Weinberg, Kuhn, and contemporary observational cosmology. Special attention is given to phenomenic elements, Inductive Effects, the cosmogonic theorem, and the cosmological Eras of TO. Within the interpretive hypothesis adopted in this paper, the transcendent element is understood as knowledge or information produced in atomic relations and equivalent to atomic radiations. Under this reading, the ChronoShell Framework is received not as a final ontological substitute for the Theory of Objectivity, but as a possible phenomenological-geometrical interlocutor capable of enriching the description of how reality may project and organize itself from a deeper order. Keywords Theory of Objectivity; ChronoShell Framework; multidimensional time; modal ontology; cosmology; metaphysics of time; dark matter; gravity; vacuum; information; phenomenic table; Inductive Effects; cosmogonic theorem; Zenodo; critical-propositional analysis
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Vidamor Cabannas
Denivaldo Silva
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Cabannas et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b8f13ddeb47d591b8c6323 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19040417
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