All that actually demonstrates is "missing mass", and that they simply blew their original mass estimates. That's hardly surprising IMO. I've seen them ignore the clear problems in their theories for years now. They've ignored the dust problems, the star calculations problems, pretty every problem they've encountered in fact. Their 'dark matter' calculations haven't budged an inch although some of these revelations are over three years old now.
The shining: astronomers find our universe is twice as bright> Swinburne Magazine
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/features.cfm?feature=2287
You've convinced me that astronomers blew their original mass estimates. Convince me now that any of that "missing mass" is related to "exotic" forms of matter that we've never seen on Earth.
Most peer review is actually quite receptive towards new ideas...as long as they conform to the same rigour as accepted scientific theories.
In astronomy that's a nice "ideal", but it doesn't come close to working that way in real life. Alfven called mainstream theories related to magnetic reconnection "pseudoscience". He instead embraced an electric universe. That never stopped the mainstream from pilfering his work, ignoring his complaints about MR theories, and misrepresenting his work every single day.
For example, what you said is often claimed by Creationists as an explanation for why they are not taken seriously in scientific circles, and as an adjunct to the whole "academic freedom" argument, when the truth is that their ideas are not testable, they do not explain observed phenomena with the same rigour as currently accepted theories, and they are not consistent with our current understanding of the universe.
That may be true in terms of creationism. In terms of EU theory however, Birkeland already empirically tested most of the key concepts over 100 years ago in real empirical experiments with real control mechanisms. In fact his team correctly predicted the existence of high speed solar with, of BOTH types of charged particles, coronal loops, high speed jets, pretty much everything we observe in modern satellite images of the sun. Did the mainstream take any of his work seriously? No. It wasn't until the 1970's that they even acknowledge his auroral theories have merit. At the rate they are going, his cathode sun concepts will take another 100 years for them to embrace.
But, again, that does not mean the process is useless, nor does it mean that it does not work.
It's simply functions as a defacto enforcement mechanism to uphold and defend the status quo, and promote like minded thinking. Sure, it's got a few pluses, and a few minuses, but the moment someone gets too far out of line you just yank they publishing channels and that's pretty much the end of their professional career. Talk to Halton Arp about the mainstream taking away your nifty astronomy toys if you don't agree with party line dogma.
For a scientist in his professional capacity, I believe that "worshiping" empiricism is a pretty good position to have, since science deals strictly with empirically measurable phenomena.
You'd think the mainstream would be less fond of metaphysical stuff like SUSY particles that tend to be long term duds in the lab, but they seem to worship dogma, not lab results.
I'm unsure what point you're even trying to make in referencing supersymmetry.
1) They have predictive power
Ok.
2) They are backed by empirical evidence
Er, no. What empirical evidence?
3) They can be falsifiable
They've been falsified in the lab for 20 or so years now. Nobody cares.
315 Physicists Report Failure In Search for Supersymmetry - NYTimes.com
BBC News - LHC results put supersymmetry theory 'on the spot'
CERN Document Server: Search for supersymmetry in all-hadronic events with MT2
CERN Document Server: Search for Supersymmetry in Events with Photons, Jets and Missing Energy
When is a dead horse a dead horse anyway?
I don't see this is true at all. Maybe you should do away with the analogy, it doesn't really fit that well and it's just starting to become confusing.
Actually, it's quite appropriate in terms of analogies IMO. SUSY theory, like God theory does make predictions. In terms of empirical support however, SUSY theory is a total dud in the lab. Why would you entertain SUSY theory today yet reject the theory of God that I posted in the Empirical theory of God thread?
God quite literally sustains everything (in pantheism).
I'm not sure what you mean by that response. I'd be willing to measure EM fields both inside and outside of the human brain during prayer and meditation to look for empirical EM connections between them. At least I can conceive of A way to test the idea. If nobody on the planet can tell me where to get some "dark energy", or explain where it comes from, what are the odds of putting the idea to a real physical test with actual control mechanisms?
How about we start with near death experiences for starters. Why do even atheist report meeting someone they call God during such events?
1) Expansion of space under laboratory conditions is unobservable because of the scales required to see it.
How inconvenient. In other words it's so impotent in the lab and on Earth, it's presumed to be more impotent than the average religious deity. Got it.
2) When someone makes an argument to discredit a scientific theory, they must also posit a newer, better theory in its place.
First of all, that is a fallacy. I can reject any theory for any legitimate scientific reason without positing a 'better' one.
http://www.christianforums.com/t7440288/
IMO it beats mainstream metaphysical cosmology theory to an empirical pulp.
3) I never said there weren't problems with the explanation. If there were no problems it would cease to be exciting.
It's hard to be excited about the likelihood of discovering exotic forms of matter when there have been 20 years of nothing but failure. When exactly should I give upon on exotic dark matter theories anyway?