Should these people be given research grants to put forth patently woo-woo ideas such as "hidden diminsions," gravitons, fantisies of Grand Unified Theories, speculations about conditions at the Big Bang and the formation of Galaxies, and all kinds of other wild, inflamed imaginings?
I'm curious, Hyparxis...is your contention that all these ideas are "woo-woo" based on actual evidence? Or just on your inability to understand them?
Let me give an example -- the
existence of atoms was predicted long before we had the technology to prove they existed. But, despite our inability to
prove it by direct observation, scientists were able to make predictions -- "
If atoms exist,
then we can predict the following phenomena" -- that were confirmed by experiment.
Please read my definition above of "woo" and "non-woo". "Woo" would be those theories that have no evidence whatsoever, or in which a small proportion of evidence supports it, but a larger proportion discredits it (but is ignored by the woo-sayers). "Non-woo" would be theories in which the preponderance of evidence supports the theory.
Now, the thing is, in our
current understanding of the universe, based on
current (by this I mean, theories predating things like string theory) theories, there are certain phenomenon which we cannot explain. And current models are entirely incapable of giving us a "Unified Theory of Everything" (to explain how all the different forces in the universe act/interact).
These new theories -- for all that you call them "woo" -- do not in
any way violate what we observe in the world around us. The mathematical models they are built one match almost perfectly with the actual world we observe, both on atomic and subatomic levels. In addition, they show much greater promise of enabling us to unify all of nature's forces, something that is impossible with 'conventional' theories.
I am not aware of
any evidence that contradicts the theories or predictions of these fields. If you know of some, please feel free to share it with us.
To summarize:
- a theory that does not contradict any observed/measured effect in our universe
- a theory that explains phenomena in our universe better than conventional models
- a theory that enables us to unite different forces that are impossible to unite under conventional models
I don't see how this can be categorized as "woo". Granted, most of it requires such exotic mathematics, and drastically different views of reality than our 'intuition' would indicate is 'logical', that to the average joe it'll appear like a bunch of hocum that deserves to be relegated to the loony bin. But inability to understand it does not mean that it is wrong.
If you want to demonstrate that it deserves the designation of being "woo", then rather than simply dismissing it, how about presenting actual evidence? Showing us how these theories are actually wrong? How they are
less able to explain our universe than the conventional models we accept as "true" now?
From Einstein to Hawking, the world has been introduced to theories that at first seemed wild and crazy -- but which have subsequently come to be accepted as fundamental truths. Here we have new theories which explain our universe even
better than those theories do, without contradicting
any observed phenomena, yet we should just call them "woo"?
I'm not saying that these theories
are the correct models; but it certainly appears that they are at least leading us in a
direction that leads to a greater understanding of the fundamentals of how our universe works than anything else currently on the table.
And that's why I'd say that funding such research is very, very different from funding "woo".