This work presents a continuity-first ontological framework that challenges several foundational assumptions of modern physics, particularly the substance-first interpretation of gravity, cosmology, and time. Instead of treating matter, spacetime, and time as primary entities, this series argues that continuity is ontologically fundamental, while structure, form, and temporal measurement emerge as secondary expressions under constraint.Within this framework, dark matter and dark energy are reinterpreted not as undiscovered substances or hidden dimensions, but as continuity artifacts arising from structural insufficiency. The concept of Anti-Shape is introduced to describe a non-material, non-energetic structural response that manifests when localized form fails to carry continuity. Gravitational anomalies and cosmic acceleration are thus reframed as effects of continuity maintenance rather than missing contents.Black holes are analyzed as continuity saturation structures rather than physical singularities. In this view, singularities signal descriptive failure at the limits of structure, not physical infinities. Event horizons mark ontological boundaries where classical structure ceases to support continuity, and phenomena such as Hawking radiation are interpreted as continuity relaxation processes rather than paradoxical emissions.The Big Bang is reinterpreted as a structural emergence event within a pre-existing, non-temporal continuity regime. This approach rejects the notion of absolute cosmic beginnings and reframes cosmological origin as a phase transition from non-structural continuity to localized form.Finally, the work argues that time has no independent ontological existence and should be understood as a measurement artifact imposed on structured change. Time does not cause change; it labels sequences produced by continuity-driven reorganization through resonance.This series does not propose new particles, forces, or modifications to established field equations. Instead, it offers a controlled ontological reorientation intended to clarify conceptual paradoxes in cosmology, gravity, and the philosophy of time, while remaining compatible with existing empirical frameworks.
Khan Alim ul haq (Sun,) studied this question.