There is a singularity from which everything we experience comes. It is in one place, and yet all the black holes in the universe lead to it.
In order for something to appear to be separate from the black hole, it must be "burned" with time. Hence, in the beginning, at the time we call the big bang, time was attached to everything that is in the universe.
What we experience as background radiation, is in fact the smallest types of particle/waves (or in the language of the hologram universe, tendencies to return to the singularity separated by time) all smoking with the time that has been burns on them.
Time must, therefore, be extremely flamable. Whether time loses its combustive qualities on time is uncertain, but there does appear to be a finite burn time: http://www.mnn.com/earth-matters/space/stories/time-will-end-within-a-few-billion-years-say-physicists.
Bousso appeals to me because he doesn't care if he is correct, he just wants to be rational. I assume many will take umbrage with a theory like mine that things may be far apart, yet drop out of our universe when sufficient mass is gathered (tendency to return to the singularity) to overcome time.
The "burning" question must be what happens to the time attached to the tendencies (matter/energy) when they return to the singularity. This needs to be addressed in some detail for the universe to be understood. And there may be some evidence of this around black holes that can be observed. Time is either consolidated, perhaps into the singularity itself, or it may be attached to other matter around the black hole. It may cease to exist, but this is counter-intuitive (although in the singularity our "intuition" is not of much value.
Time aside from being flamable may have the ability to combine. We know that "tendencies" have the ability to combine. Everything solid is evidence of this. Otherwise, the tendencies that make you up and the time that makes me up might fluctuate wildly relative to one another. Likewise, the black holes would not get enough tendency combined to sink back to the singularity. In fact, gravity is the tendency to return to the singularity and this binds matter together. Time is more problematic. While we know that things moving fast have time that changes relative to things moving slow, every particle going at the same speed (in the same direction) seems to have the same time. But time does not seem to combine intuitively the same way as tendecies (which forces us to consider that tendencies and time are two different things) because the addition of time caused what we call matter/energy (or tendencies to return to the hologram) caused the massive "appearance" of separation of everything from the singularity.
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