As with dark matter, I think inflation is the most likely thing that happened, but I will change my mind if it is disproven.

I find it so quaint that you're so "trusting" when it comes to handwaves from astronomers about dark sky entities and (now dead) inflation genies created by one man's overactive imagination, yet you're "unsure" about God.

Wow.

Talk about blind faith. I"m not sure my personal "faith" in science or religion was ever that "strong and pure".
I hope you realize that Alan Guth started the "inflation" religion by himself, without any scientific precedent whatsoever. His dead sky god is forever beyond the scope of "empirical physics" because it's A) now dead and gone by design, and B) Guth's original inflation theory was in fact falsified.
The problem is that the inflation DOGMA, outlives any falsification process. It's now taken on a metaphysical life of it's own with more than a dozen "new and improved" metaphysical brands to choose from to fit ANY observation.
The term "dark matter" is actually mainstream lingo/code for "yes we know our models don't match observation, so "dark sky god did it". Their models are flawed and they are simply too arrogant and too proud to fix them.
I'm sure Stars don't fit in labs either, but we have knowledge of them.
We don't have much "knowledge" about them, just "theories" about them that change over time.
I knew that they were saying it was some small number like that.
It's quite "pitiful" IMO. I hesitate to even call it a real "theory" actually since it only actually "explains" 4% of the universe. How is that even a "good" theory?
If you had asked me that half a year ago I might have said yes. It seems I have almost lost the fight to keep my faith though.
It sounds to me like you put you "faith" in some misconceptions, much like you're doing with inflation right now.
Not nearly as dramatic as I once imagined it might happen.
For me at least the journey from "Bad dogma theist" to "atheist" was gradual but steady, as was the conversion from atheism back to theism, and eventually to a form of "Christianity" that was quite unlike the one I was handed by my church. It was more of a "slow but steady learning process" at each step along the journey, at least for me.
I do wish there was a God.
You happen to be in luck.
What caused the Big Bang... I don't know.
I was hoping by now you might actually realize that it's possible that no "bang" ever occurred at all, but alas you're not quite an "agnostic" on that topic I see.
You say this as if scientists think dark matter has been proven just as much as relativity.
That is because they constantly attempt to use a kludged and butchered version of GR to support their claims. The version of GR that they use today is the version that Einstein referred to as his 'greatest blunder', and he didn't do the stuff they do with it.
I would be surprised if that was the case. I don't find it strange at all that we know nothing about the thing we know nothing about (dark matter).
But you expect all humans to agree on the topic of God?
I'm still not sure why you think you are the position to assess such a thing. I mean, whether any particular theory is legitimate or not.
I was 9 when we landed men on the moon, and astronomy has been my passion since then. I've got more than 30 years of efforts under my belt and I've spent the last 7 years debating astronomers in cyberspace over these issues. I know the ins and out of the issues and the personalities in cyberspace as well.
Nothing can really disprove God. I don't know what could disprove dark matter.
Ah, but if it's not falsifiable is it actually a form of "science"?
Philosophy, rather than science, has been my reading for the last few years, so my science knowledge has dropped off a bit.
Dark matter is mostly a philosophical argument based upon the premise that their models are all "correct and perfect" and without blemish. If you don't buy their dogma about how wonderful their galaxy mass estimation techniques work, the dark matter argument falls COMPLETELY apart.
Inflation was definitely a "philosophical" argument since it's A) never existed since humans have existed even if Guth was right, a B) Guth had no scientific precedent for even dreaming up the idea in the first place.
Dark energy is certainly a philosophical argument because like all the other dark/invisible stuff of mainstream theory, it fails miserably to show up in any lab on Earth.
You're actually doing fine by studying philosophy. It applies to lots of topics.
Well according to the all wise Wikipedia there are reasons for rejecting tired light theory.
Ya, but all of those "reasons" were addressed by those papers I cited.
To answer this properly I would need to understand both properly. I don't so I can't.
That isn't really unusual. What is unusual is that in one case you go AGAINST the consensus (not a theist), whereas in the other case you "assume the masses are right". There is no "scientific method" that demonstrates that "dark energy" is anything other than an Epic sized example of metaphysical gap filler designed specifically to save one otherwise falsified cosmology theory.
I'm going to have to break my response up into a few posts so I'll stop here for the time being.