Here is a very interesting discourse from 1982 (?) with Sheldrake and David Bohm discussing the theory of the Big Bang and Blackholes (http://perception.inner-growth.org/2017/03/25/morphic-fields-and-the-implicate-order-rupert-sheldrake-david-bohm/). Although this conversation is not unknown, I found this statement to be of interest:
Bohm: There is also the belief, commonly accepted, that at the core of black holes the laws as we know them would also vanish. As you say, scientists haven’t faced up to it because they are still thinking in the old way, in terms of timeless laws. But some physicists realize that. One cosmologist was giving a talk and he said, ‘Well, you know, I used to think everything was a law of nature, and it’s all fixed, but as far as a black hole is concerned, anything can happen. You see, if it suddenly flashed a Coca Cola sign, this would still be a possibility.’ [Laughter]. So, the notion of timeless laws doesn’t seem to hold, because time itself is part of the necessity that developed. The black hole doesn’t involve time and space as we know it; they all vanish. It’s not just matter that vanishes, but any regular order that we know of vanishes, and therefore you could say anything goes, or nothing goes…
Here is another interview here: http://www.fdavidpeat.com/interviews/bohm.htm, which he says similar things, yet goes more into the metaphor of human memory to give context to time.
Not sure if this was to any interest to anyone, but if you are wanting more conceptual ideas to black holes in relativity to time, this would be a fun place to start.
-Jessie McCarty