This article presents a critical–propositional reading of Mason William McElvain’s manuscript A Single Collapse Threshold Linking Cosmology, Gravitation, and Decoherence: FE = 1 ⇔ Senv = ℏ, Parameter-Free Predictions for CMB Peaks, Lensing, and Laboratory Tests in light of Vidamor Cabannas and Denivaldo Silva’s Theory of Objectivity (TO). The study examines the extent to which McElvain’s proposed collapse threshold can be interpreted as a relevant interlocutor for the modal, ontological, and cosmological discipline of TO. The analysis investigates structural compatibilities and tensions between McElvain’s framework and the Seven Absolute Truths of the Theory of Objectivity, with special attention to the roles of distinction, boundary, relational observation, antecedent composition, transcendence, and the emergence of objective regimes. It also articulates the manuscript with phenomenic elements, Inductive Effects, the cosmogonic theorem of TO, and the cosmological Eras developed in the recent bibliography of the Theory of Objectivity. The article argues that McElvain’s model is especially significant insofar as it attempts to formalize the transition from relational information to objective geometric inscription, thereby offering a possible phenomenological and operational bridge between quantum collapse, gravitation, cosmology, and the modal discipline of objectivity. At the same time, the study contends that the manuscript does not attain the deeper ontological level required by TO, since it does not reconstruct the genesis of the universe from Nothingness, does not integrate infinity as the necessary non-element of logical definition, and does not fully ground the transcendent dimension of reality. Accordingly, this paper concludes that McElvain’s proposal should not be treated as an ontological substitute for the Theory of Objectivity, but rather as a potentially fruitful regional formalism for the study of objective transition within an already constituted cosmos. In this sense, the work contributes both to the critical expansion of contemporary foundational physics and to the ongoing development of the Theory of Objectivity as a modal, ontological, and scientific framework. Note by the authors: This analytical study benefited from the analytical support of ChatGPT. Keywords: Theory of Objectivity; Mason William McElvain; quantum collapse; Fisher information; decoherence; gravitation; cosmology; modal ontology; phenomenic elements; Inductive Effects; cosmogonic theorem; philosophy of physics; foundations of physics; objective transition; analytical support of ChatGPT.
Cabannas et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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