Ron Bert said:
Hi Simon, thanks for your pleasant correspondence. I did review the link you supplied and though much surpasses my abilities, the information concerning black holes was very useful for myself and all who would be interested. Might I inquire of you a few questions as I hope you have the ability to respond appropriately, and it would help clarify my understanding.
Just quickly - the link I gave you is a good starting place, you can google the bits that you don't understand.
Do I understand correctly that you believe that there is no actual singularity, as it is only a theoretical construct?
I know for a fact that it is an artifact of the model being used ... the same way I know the model spitfire hanging from the ceiling is made of plastic. There is no reason to suppose that the models we use are accurate in absolutely every detail so we have to be careful about how far we take them.
Do you believe there is no point without mass inside the black hole?
When the observer is closer than the Schwarzschild radius, there is no reason to believe that anything much will be different. But there is also no reason to believe that all the mass/energy is physically compressed to zero size either.
Am I correct in assuming that black holes maintain different diameters in relation to the event horizon and that they can grow and shrink?
"maintain"?
It is reasonable to expect that the collapsed body within the event horizon has a different diameter to the horizon if that is what you mean.
However, you have to be careful with such glib statements - a lot of our intuitive concepts don't mean anything in these sorts of geometries.
If singularities exist, are not all singularities universally equivalent?
No. No more than all infinities being the same.
Could you elaborate on the map verses the territory?
"The map is not the territory."
-- Alfred Korzybski (Science and Sanity, 1933, p. 747–61)
The map–territory relation describes the relationship between an object and a representation of that object, as in the relation between a geographical territory and a map of it. "The map is not the territory", encapsulates the view that an abstraction derived from something, or a reaction to it, is not the thing itself. Many people do confuse maps with territories, that is, confuse models of reality with reality itself.
"I pointed the Way and you fell down on your knees and worshipped my finger."
-- Malaclypse the Elder (Principia Discordia)
In this case the Einstein relations for gravitation are the map.
Insisting on the physical reality for any result of these relations without checking them is to confuse the map for the territory. The map is always provisional.