The funny thing about this exchange for me is that it reveals Michael's bizarre respect (if that's the right word) for authority figures, provided that they're dead. Birkeland was a visionary, and his mistakes are forgotten. Alfven was a genius, and progress in plasma physics since him get ignored. And Einstein's work was empirically "qualified" (whatever the hell that means) but modern cosmology is not. The irony of Michael's treatment of Einstein is multi-faceted: Michael doesn't understand GR itself, he doesn't understand that it's primarily a mathematically-justified theory that only gained experimental evidence long after it was formulated, and he doesn't understand that Einstein made unjustified assumptions with lambda. This deference and incomprehension leads Michael to claim he's supporting Einstein when in fact the position he is trying to take is directly contradicted by Einstein's actual work. But he can't bring himself to claim that Einstein was wrong about anything (even though he clearly was, and even admitted so), just like he can't admit Alfven or Birkeland were wrong. It's quite strange. The sad part is that this mythologizing deprives them of their humanity, and the enforced ignorance required to maintain this illusion limits appreciation of their true accomplishments.