This paper develops an interpretive reading of the black hole information problem within a consistency-history framework that distinguishes preservation, commitment, recoverability, feasible auditability, and public finality. Its central claim is narrow: the Page time should be understood as a transition in recoverability, not as the onset of redundant public facthood. In controlled island and quantum-extremal-surface models, an interior region associated with the black hole becomes reconstructible from the Hawking radiation after the Page transition. The paper redescribes this as a transition from hidden encoding to recoverable encoding. It does not derive the Page curve, the island formula, replica wormholes, or a solution to the black hole information problem; those results are supplied by the cited quantum-information and quantum-gravity literature. The paper argues that Hawking radiation is not, by itself, a Quantum-Darwinist broadcasting environment for the infalling microstate information. Recovery requires a large radiation region and a holistic decoding, while no small set of disjoint fragments independently carries the same infalling record. Recoverability-in-principle therefore remains distinct from strong public finality, which would require redundant, non-disturbing, and repeatable access by multiple independent observers. The Harlow–Hayden complexity barrier further separates formal reconstructibility from feasible auditability. On this reading, the Page curve schedules delayed recoverability rather than strong public finality. If the recovered information later becomes redundantly recorded in ordinary detectors and environments, that later public finality is a downstream process rather than something supplied by the black hole itself. The paper is interpretive and conceptual, has L2 status within the framework’s claim discipline, and makes no independent empirical prediction.
Tomoyuki Uchida (Wed,) studied this question.
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