PSI Blog 20190925 Big Bang regressives
and reformists compete for cosmogonical superiority in Nature and New Scientist
I guess “Nature” was trying to
outdo “New Scientist” in pandering to the latest cosmological nonsense on
August 14.
Here is the latest regression from Nature:
Radioastronomers look to hydrogen for insights into the
Universe’s first billion years."
Here is the latest reform attempt from New Scientist:
There is no good evidence that our universe even had a
beginning, a startling proposition that means the cosmos could collapse in
about 100 billion years"
You can read these or not,
depending on how confused you wish to be. They are instructive as comparisons
of the regressive approach and the reformist approach.
We define regressives as those who
have fallen for relativity and the Big Bang Theory hook, line, and sinker. The Nature
article does that by pursuing Kuhn’s “ordinary science” as if the regressive paradigm
had no flaws whatsoever. And who knows? They might find something useful, just
like the Microwave Background and dark matter that must be taken into account
in Infinite Universe Theory as well. It makes sense to start with hydrogen,
which is small enough and ubiquitous enough. Maybe they
will even survive the shock of their eventual discovery that hydrogen is being
produced as this is written.
We define reformists as critical thinkers who
accept part of the mainstream paradigm but not other parts. The New Scientist
article rejects the assumption that the universe had an origin. Strictly
speaking then, the proposal brought forth is not a cosmogony. But like the
mainstream regressives and the Steady State Theorists, it accepts the universal
expansion hypothesis. The author obviously has no qualms about Einstein’s eight
ad hocs that kept the particle theory of light and the expansion ideas from their
deserved demise. Of course, the cycling idea, like the oxymoronic multiverse
ideas both depend on magical causation just like the Big Bang Theory itself.
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