The model proposed by the Steinhardt and Turok seems to have little to do with older models since theirs is based on the fairly recent discovery of dark energy. The authors claim their model is just as consistent with observations as is the inflationary model, so I'm not sure why inflation is "the best option available."
A claim does not suffice. The underlying reason is that their model has somewhere between very little and zero explanatory power.
That is why I have speculated that the preference for inflation may be due to historical precedence and emotional ties.
That really makes no sense, as I just explained. Cyclic models are the ones with historical precedence.
My premise (as you call it) is the premise of Steinhardt and Turok. Write them a letter; perhaps they can tell you why your comments are absurd.
There are hundreds of papers published on the topic, many of which expose serious problems with their claims. There is no need to "write them a letter".
Hmm, perpetual motion vs. something appearing out of nothing?
Interesting choice!
That's a false dichotomy, resulting from the fact that you don't understand what you're discussing. Inflation is NOT a theory of the origins of the universe - it's a theory of what happened AFTER the big bang, bounce, or whatever came before inflation. The cyclic model is perfectly compatible with inflation, in the sense that inflation could have occurred after the "bounce". But the success of inflation doesn't
require any such assumption about what happened at the would-be singularity.
The debate is whether the cyclic model can account for the data
without a period of inflation, and if so whether it is as or more predictive than inflation. As for inflation, it doesn't care whether there was a bounce, singularity, instanton, or what - that's what's so powerful about it. Regardless of origins of the universe, inflation almost always produces universes of a specific type - which just happens to match the one we live in. That's an extremely non-trivial claim, and that's what makes inflation successful.
The cyclic model, on the other hand, must be carefully tuned by hand to make its predictions match the available data.... and even having done that, it is very unclear whether the many assumptions going into it are even mathematically self-consistent. It really isn't good science, at least not so far.