DeathDart
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2011
- Messages
- 1,251
It's odd that you chose to quote sol's post in this reply considering that it is in no way a reply to his actual words. He pointed out that mainstream physics does not in any way resemble dogma (in reply to your insinuation that it's the dogma that is preventing people accepting your ideas).
No problem with you posting the above, but I just hope you realise it's not in any way related to the post you quoted.![]()
I also have problems remembering what questions people have asked me. My mind will diverge along lines that are logically connected, but with less and less relation to the original question. Then I have to ask people what question I was answering. Not a very good sign of mental discipline.
At this point. Dark Matter is starting to become the orthodoxy, if this were to continue for another 20-50 years it could become dogma. I really don't think it answers or helps answer the problems. To me, it is just a patch that you can't build on, it really doesn't seem to lead anywhere.
I don't think (so far) that I am wrong. But I have this feeling that I have missed something, it could be just fatigue. As far as taking my ideas and doing an Old Yeller on them, this iteration does not have as much time invested, as some other ideas, that I have put down.
The feeling I have, is that I have expanded the idea into too many areas, without enough analysis. At the intuitive level it seems right, but in the past my intuition has been off. Usually when I am new to an area and haven't programmed the rules in. Would I bet my life that I am right, No.
I have really assessed your arguments. Einstein created a robust framework that applies to infinite time. If you think I was arguing that Einstein was wrong, without Einstein, my theory would collapse. It takes Einsteins framework and applies it to Galactic Velocity curves, and the inflation of the Big Bang.
As far as light moving over absolute distances at many times local speed, that is extending the solution from Galactic Orbital velocities, to the time space between galaxies. It seems intuitively correct. It appears to be a direct extension of relativity, in a right angle sort of way.
I guess what makes me the most uneasy about it, is that it appears too simple. At least it kinda has Occam in its corner.