sol invictus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2007
- Messages
- 8,613
It has been my experience that whenever an area of science has highly trained, accomplished and respected professionals (like Steinhardt) who do not agree with mainstream opinions, all is not as conclusive as the mainstream would like lowly laymen to believe.
And yet what you've been told over and over and over and over is that "mainstream" physics doesn't answer the question in the title of this thread. No one knows the answer. Steinhardt has a pet theory, but there are many other possibilities, some of which are far better supported and most of which are more likely to be self-consistent.
Do you understand the meaning of "evidence?" Internally consistent mathematical models can be developed to demonstrate a great many physically incorrect theories. They are not evidence! As an old retired mathematician, I think I could come up with a few nonsensical ones myself.
You plainly don't know 'the meaning of "evidence"'. One hypothesizes a model, extracts its predictions mathematically, and checks them against experiment. Every successful prediction is evidence for the model. With many successful predictions in hand and none that conflict with data, one has some degree of confidence that the remaining, as yet untested predictions may be correct as well - certainly more than those of some theory that's never been tested.
So then it is obvious that the model is either incomplete or flawed.
Yes, as is acknowledged by everyone (and as you've been told over and over and over and over).
I do not have a position. Time having a beginning seems to be contradictory. Time not having a beginning seems to be contradictory.
And yet you've utterly failed to tell us what those contradictions are, despite being asked many, many times.