Marshall
Thinker
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2011
- Messages
- 208
There's no middle ground for discussion. The 1915 law of gravity (involving dynamically changing geometry) has been well-demonstrated in many ways over many years. All the alternative explanation for observed redshift have be raised and refuted ad nauseam.
The law of gravity tells us to expect distances to be expanding (or contracting, which they evidently are not) and tells us therefore to expect a pattern of redshift, which we in fact observe.
The basic classic expansion model cosmology is not challenged any more.
But you are saying that distances do not expand and that the observed redshifts are due to something else.
You can SAY this and it is in fact moderately entertaining to have you do so. But it is impossible to have a rational discussion. My perspective is just too different to connect on a middle ground.
I would say today's challenge is to improve the expansion cosmo model so that it makes the same successful predictions as the classic one, but is better because it does not suffer from a singularity and is able to crank on back in time to before expansion started---to a highly dense state and possibly on back before that. And then the followon challenge of how to test and verify or falsify that improved expansion model. those are interesting challenges. I like very much to follow the current research on that.
Pretty much all after 2008.
Anyone who wants to learn something about cosmology needs to pay attention to recent research, post 2007 or 2008 basically. There are no popular books that I know of.
So it is a different perspective on things, Leumas. We just have very different points of view and there is little if anything to be gained by discussing.
You dont even accept the premise that distances are expanding
I don't see that anything would be accomplished by arguing, nor do I see that any harm could result from simply disagreeing as to our basic viewpoints.
The law of gravity tells us to expect distances to be expanding (or contracting, which they evidently are not) and tells us therefore to expect a pattern of redshift, which we in fact observe.
The basic classic expansion model cosmology is not challenged any more.
But you are saying that distances do not expand and that the observed redshifts are due to something else.
You can SAY this and it is in fact moderately entertaining to have you do so. But it is impossible to have a rational discussion. My perspective is just too different to connect on a middle ground.
I would say today's challenge is to improve the expansion cosmo model so that it makes the same successful predictions as the classic one, but is better because it does not suffer from a singularity and is able to crank on back in time to before expansion started---to a highly dense state and possibly on back before that. And then the followon challenge of how to test and verify or falsify that improved expansion model. those are interesting challenges. I like very much to follow the current research on that.
Pretty much all after 2008.
Anyone who wants to learn something about cosmology needs to pay attention to recent research, post 2007 or 2008 basically. There are no popular books that I know of.
So it is a different perspective on things, Leumas. We just have very different points of view and there is little if anything to be gained by discussing.
You dont even accept the premise that distances are expanding
I don't see that anything would be accomplished by arguing, nor do I see that any harm could result from simply disagreeing as to our basic viewpoints.
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