well wouldn't it be prudent to consider the possibility and try to think about ways of determining if it is the case?
here is a thought I had, not one I would expect anyone to take seriously, but I thought it was interesting. what if the nature of the universe is as some have suggested cyclic, but not in the boom and crunch cycle, but in more of an infinite recursion cycle. what happens when the event horizon gets smaller than an electron? a quark? the most basic subatomic particle that can exist that we haven't a name for yet? what if it's exsistance decomposes into a smaller scale sub particulate with time moving at a relatively slower pace, the sub elements,that in the universe just moments ago could not exist now flutter about interact and recombine in the small sphere of influence they still have, the sum total of the energy of this system would be the same as the particle which spawned it, but it fills the whole microcosm, which is still expanding, slowed locally perhaps by gravity, but still ongoing. you see where I'm going yes? the a universe spawned from an electron what seems to us to be a minuscule amount of energy could simply be scaled down, nothing in that universe would know it's energy was once a tightly packed point in a vast other universe, nothing could know.
and there is absolutely no way to test it, that is infuriating.