temporalillusion
Technical Admin
Yup the forum software can easily split out posts to a new thread. Just report the post using the little triangle and ask for that, they should be able to do it.
Since then it's been clearly established that you do, indeed, have "a very different view of what modern cosmology, as a science, is than almost everyone else who has posted to this thread"
So the main thing that is still being discussed, in this thread, is how and why you, MM, regard modern cosmology (or at least LCDM models) as scientific woo.
Now there are many ways to go about answering that question (or set of questions); I've chosen a particular approach that involves first understanding the scope of what you regard as cosmology (and you've been most forthcoming on that topic, thanks), then determining what criteria you use to assess acceptability, within that scope.
I'm sorry to read that you think I'm "attacking" you; may I assure you that I'm not, and ask that you point me to the posts where you think I was (so I can modify my future posts so as to avoid giving you this perception)?
What are you talking about? I didn't say anything about "superluminal expansion", whatever you think that is.
Expansion of objects? What objects - what are you talking about?
You tried to draw a distinction between "spacetime expansion" and expanding space, which is absurd.
You have no idea what you're talking about, and as usual when called on it you respond with non-sequitors. Just like humber.
How large is the physical universe in light years,
and how many years old is the universe in your opinion?
The absurd part is not noting that "space" does not expand, whereas objects can expand and do expand away from each other in all sorts of controlled experiments. Care to physically demonstrate the spacetime expansion you're trying to use that would allow this universe to be this physical size in under 14 billion years?
Rather than use my own words, here is a quick and easy summary:
http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Relativity/GR/olbers.html
Not necessarily.What does he say about it? The observed time dilation of distant supernovae would appear to rule out any "tired light" or EM theory.
4 Conclusions and discussions
The very best data by the supernova researchers are consistent with the magnitude-redshift relations predicted by the plasma redshift. The data indicate that there is no time dilation; that is, the data indicate that the contemporary big-bang hypothesis is false. In Figs. 1, 2, and 3 it is assumed that each galaxy has an intrinsic redshift of about z = 0.000925, which was derived independently from the density determination in the Galactic corona. [7] Fig. 1 to 3 are consistent with these intrinsic redshift estimates. Fig. 4 indicates that Eq. (1), which eliminates the time dilation from the magnitude determination, is a good approximation. The 10 high-redshift supernovae with excessive deviation from the theoretical curve are listed in Table 2. These 10 supernovae are all at high Galactic latitudes, 9 have positive and 1 negative
deviations. This suggests that a large positive deviation is due to an underestimate of the absorption in the neutral gas of host galaxy. Fig. 2 shows that when we exclude these supernovae, both the low and high-redshift supernovae are close to the theoretical curve for plasma redshift.
Well, I'm on thin ice here, but I'll try. The second law of thermodynamics states that the entropy of a system which is not in equilibrium will tend to increase over time, approaching a maximum value (at equilibrium). So, that would also have to apply to the total universe. If the universe did not have a beginning, it would have attained total equilibrium by now.
That is unknown. It is larger than the visible universe, but we don't know if it's closed (finite) or open (infinite), because its curvature is small.
Somewhere in the neighborhood of 14 billion years.
Complain to Einstein.
GR allows an infinitely large universe with a finite age - no inflation, dark matter, or dark energy required. Your objection only makes sense if you either don't understand general relativity or think its wrong. Since you don't seem to be taking the second option, I have to assume it's the first.
M. M.:
One of your major criticisms of dark energy has been the lack of evidence.
Are you aware of the recent discovery of galaxy distribution and clustering that was predicted by the dark energy hypothesis?
I think this is the kind of observational evidence that has significant weight in the absence of "laboratory experiments.”
Questions:
Dark energy is estimated to account for more than 70% of the mass of the universe. I assume since DE is "energy," the mass estimate comes from the E=mc2 relationship. Why is the mass estimate so huge?
DE manifests as a force that causes the expansion of the universe to accelerate. Gravity tends to slow the universe down. So what is the mass of gravity as a percentage of the total? What percentage of the total mass would all the EM energy in the universe represent? Would quantum theory require that there exist DE particles?
Creationist tactics like appeal to a long list of names. Complete misrepresentation of the topic at hand. Demanding the theory in question explains stuff it was never intended to explain or be tested in such a way as to falsify the theory if the test was succesful. Regular shifting of goal posts. Complete refusal to subject their own pet theory to the standard of proof they demand of others.
Oh wait, these were all tactics used by you.
All I'm asking you for is evidence that inflation isn't a figment of your imagination. Is that really too much to ask when you are claiming this is a form of "science"? FYI, I'm not attached to any timeline or creation event, so the only one of us that is peddling a creation event on a specific timeline that they can't actually demonstrate is you, not me.
Inflation is a hypothesis. It's a good hypothesis in the opinion of most physicists, and a bad hypothesis in the opinion of a small number of people.
With inflation, we do exactly what we're supposed to do with hypotheses: make predictions and try to verify or falsify them using all available means.
Your distinction between "controlled" and "uncontrolled" experiments is stupid and useless
---you invented it yourself,
Theories which cannot be tested, because, for instance, they have no observable ramifications (such as, a particle whose characteristics make it unobservable), do not qualify as scientific theories.
III. Common Mistakes in Applying the Scientific Method
As stated earlier, the scientific method attempts to minimize the influence of the scientist's bias on the outcome of an experiment. That is, when testing an hypothesis or a theory, the scientist may have a preference for one outcome or another, and it is important that this preference not bias the results or their interpretation. The most fundamental error is to mistake the hypothesis for an explanation of a phenomenon, without performing experimental tests.
Your objection, after God-knows-how-many posts on the topic, still seems to be "Extraordinary claims demand extraordinary proof, and I, Michael Mozina, despite not understanding either the claims or the proof, have appointed myself the sole judge of what is extraordinary and what isn't."
I. The scientific method has four steps
1. Observation and description of a phenomenon or group of phenomena.
2. Formulation of an hypothesis to explain the phenomena. In physics, the hypothesis often takes the form of a causal mechanism or a mathematical relation.
3. Use of the hypothesis to predict the existence of other phenomena, or to predict quantitatively the results of new observations.
4. Performance of experimental tests of the predictions by several independent experimenters and properly performed experiments.
I don't *believe* in "blunder" theory as Einstein put it. Einstein explicitly noted that objects of mass cannot exceed the speed of light, so unless you are relying upon some form of "expansion" that you cannot actually physically demonstrate, the universe cannot be more than 28 billion light years across, and yet it is.
You were given a long list earlier. Which you rejected out of hand. If you want I can link to it again.Nope, not by me. I can easily demonstrate that gravity and EM fields are not figments of my imagination and they work in an empirical experiment with real control mechanisms. All I'm asking you for is evidence that inflation isn't a figment of your imagination.
How many times! I never called you a creationist. I was just pointing out the ways that your argument style was like that of a creationist. I cannot believe you do not know the difference between "is a" and "is like a" statements. Is your reading comprehension really that terrible? Or are you deliberately making strawmen. If its the former then I apologise but if its the latter then you're just making yourself look stupid. Anybody can check back and see what I did or didn't say.Is that really too much to ask when you are claiming this is a form of "science"? FYI, I'm not attached to any timeline or creation event, so the only one of us that is peddling a creation event on a specific timeline that they can't actually demonstrate is you, not me.
Science is a set of approximate models for the behavior of reality. Period.I can easily demonstrate that gravity and EM fields are not figments of my imagination and they work in an empirical experiment with real control mechanisms.
Can you empirically demonstrate inflation isn't a figment of your imagination, yes or no?
How large is the physical universe in light years, and how many years old is the universe in your opinion?
You know, planets, stars, galaxies, the little things that makeup our physical universe?


Care to physically demonstrate the spacetime expansion you're trying to use that would allow this universe to be this physical size in under 14 billion years?
You guys have gotten really predictable at this point. It's like watching numerologist chastise me for not knowing what I'm talking about in numerology! Sheesh. Talk to me when you can actually predict the outcome of a controlled experiment with inflation or DE.
Yes or no, can you physically and empirically demonstrate inflation for us *before* you start pointing at the sky and claiming inflation faeries did it? Yes or no? Same question for DE unicorns? How are these not "acts of faith" on your part?
I don't *believe* in "blunder" theory as Einstein put it.
Einstein explicitly noted that objects of mass cannot exceed the speed of light,
I'm not even going to get into debating GR with you
Get it through your head already: expansion of space itself in GR happens in the absence of a cosmological constant, dark matter, dark energy, and inflation.