I would expect a response that was structured thusly:
"When cosmological redshifts were first discovered, Fritz Zwicky proposed an effect known as tired light. While usually considered for historical interests, it is sometimes, along with intrinsic redshift suggestions, utilized by nonstandard cosmologies. In 1981, H. J. Reboul summarised many alternative redshift mechanisms that had been discussed in the literature since the 1930s. In 2001, Geoffrey Burbidge remarked in a review that the wider astronomical community has marginalized such discussions since the 1960s. Burbidge and Halton Arp, while investigating the mystery of the nature of quasars, tried to develop alternative redshift mechanisms, and very few of their fellow scientists acknowledged let alone accepted their work. Moreover, Goldhaber et al. 2001; "Timescale Stretch Parameterization of Type Ia Supernova B-Band Lightcurves", ApJ, 558:359-386, 2001 September 1 pointed out that alternative theories are unable to account for timescale stretch observed in type Ia supernovae."
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FYI, I have already pointed out in several threads now that the WIKI article which you cite is INACCURATE in terms of tired light theories being "unable to account" for supernovae data. Ari's work demonstrates that tired light theories absolutely can and do account for ALL the data that is typically associated with expansion and acceleration interpretations of redshifted photons.
Who says it should show up in a lab?
Why wouldn't it? If mainstream model "predictions" related to "dark matter" were accurate we SHOULD BE swimming in exotic matter in our area of the Milky Way. That PREDICTION went up in smoke. They are in fact conducting experiments on Earth that are supposed to 'detect' this exotic matter that is supposed to surround us. According to that last study, dark matter isn't even likely to be around Earth to begin with.
Dark energy is more impotent on Earth than your average concept of God according to their theory, so it's definitely not capable of showing up in a lab, therefore it has no empirical falsification mechanism at all. It should however have an pretty darn obvious source if makes up 70% of the physical universe. Forget the dead inflation sky god of Guthianity. It's just an unfalsifiable metaphysical kludge IMO.
If the universe is flat, then the total energy is zero. So much for that then.
No. The claim that the total energy of the universe is zero or could be zero is a highly popular 'atheist meme'. The universe is full of kinetic and potential energy and it has always contained that energy. Energy cannot be created or destroyed, it can only change forms. Those are the LAWS of physics as we understand them. The idea you can try to "offset" kinetic energy with gravity is pure nonsense. Guth's claim about a "free lunch" was also atheistic nonsense.
No, I meant how you keep saying *you* don't have evidence.
Ah. My bad.
A theist criticizing science as a religion? You have really got to give up on that tactic.
Hmm. Considering the venue, you're probably correct in that assessment. Shouldn't there be some tangible physical difference between "science" and "religion" however? If not, how are they "different"?
So you are okay with a god that is not eternal?
Maybe. Is there a huge fundamental difference between a being that existed eternally in the past, vs one one 'formed' from chaos that existed in the past but will continue to exist "eternally" from here forward? I could personally live with either option.
Is that your Christian God or this "Universe God" that you are okay with not being eternal?
I'm pretty sure it's s my personal beliefs and concepts that were talking about at this point.
You are projecting. You are not doing science.
I'm not projecting, I'm telling you what my experiences have been for the past 7 years. Birkeland and Alfven, Bruce, Peratt, Lerner and many others have "done the science" of plasma physics for more than 100 years. I'm a programmer by trade and quite happy with that choice thank you very much.
You still don't get this 'falsification' concept. The big bang theory is already there. You just don't like it.
True. I'm certainly not the only one that doesn't like it.
cosmologystatement.org
I'm certainly not the only one to embrace EU/PC theory either.
You still have yet to show how *your* hypothesis is falsifiable. Note that I do not use the word "theory" as you do.
From my vantage point it seems as though you've ignored every mechanism I've offered you to date, including the falsification mechanism we just talked about in terms of the length of time that matter has existed. In fact there are a host of falsification mechanisms related to PC/EU theory to consider BEFORE we ever get to the property of AWARENESS.
So which god are we talking about now? Is that your Christian God or this "Universe God"?
FYI, I don't personally see any distinction between my beliefs and the "Christian" God. I love Jesus. My beliefs are congruent with his teachings, at least as *I* see things. Others might disagree of course and I'm sure lots would. On the other hand, I don't care what judgements other Christians might throw my way since Christ told us not to judge others. I certainly don't care what atheists might think of my beliefs. There's no point in attempting to differentiate between "Christianity" and "Universe God" from my personal perspective, however it's a valid argument, and I do accept that from a scientific perspective, a living universe is essentially "religion neutral" from the perspective of pure physics. A living universe might be used to support ANY number of theistic belief systems from the perspective of physics, and potentially even atheist beliefs too for all I know. EU/PC theory is essentially religion neutral, and it's even 'theistic/atheist' neutral in terms of pure physics.
That is not the impression you have given me.
I'm afraid I can't speak much to your mind reading skills beyond what I've already stated.
FYI, based on my own personal life experience, I've been a theists (again) for almost 30 years. FYI, my scientific disenchantment with BB theory began with the introduction of Guthianity/inflation into the big bang dogma. Before that time I was quite a BB fan in fact, young mind you, but a fan none the less. I still tend to personally favor an expanding universe albeit not "space" expansion. I would say that in light of current tired light models, that's really just a leftover prejudice on my part that is leftover from my youth.
The "final straws" (last two) from my perspective were watching the term "dark matter' morph into a term that mostly represented the concept "matter our limited technologies and models have yet to correctly identify", to "exotic matter did it!" The last and final one was watching dark energy turn into a gap filler of epic proportions. That was just too much for me. Since the the introduction of "dark energy' I've just never really thought much of that particular theory. I'm pretty sure that stems from my stint as an atheist and my rejection of "supernatural" concepts in general.
I didn't actually even KNOW that PC/EU theory even existed until about 7 years ago. That particular interest is what led me to reevaluate my position on pantheism and really reconsider that idea, say 5 years ago. I'm not really even emotionally attached to the idea because most of my life I've been theist *WITHOUT* a scientific explanation for my beliefs and experience and that's just fine by me. That's what FAITH is all about.
On the other hand, my scientific curiosity simply wants to know if the universe is aware and is alive. These are legitimate scientific questions that have legitimate empirical scientific answers.
What I finally did come to realize only within the past few years is that a pantheistic explanation of the universe is *AT LEAST* as scientifically viable and scientifically/empirically falsifiable as any other popular cosmology theory. IMO that makes it worth a look.
