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Trying again, my previous reply seems to have been
trashed somewhere. "Phil" wrote in message ink.net... "George Dishman" wrote in message ... "Phil" wrote in message ink.net... With respect to viable options of thinking, we must subjectively choose between them. No, it isn't choice . . . Sure it is. Here is an analogy. Given: My wife, Steph, has a frustrated look on her face. George's explanation: Phil didn't take out the trash. Phil's explanation: I'm spending too much time at sci.physics.relativity. Steph's explanation: I just don't get the tax law. Who wrote this stuff. George's speculations: a) Phil didn't take out the trash. b) Phil forgot their anniversary. c) Phil forgot Steph's birthday. George checks the anniversary and birthday dates and finds they are both months away. George concludes that the only currently available explanation not yet falsified is that the trash was not taken out, however before this can be raised to the status of a theory the observation must be repeated. If an identical expression appears on Steph's face next time the trash isn't taken out and it never appears under any other circumstances then it will be proposed as a theory. If we then discover a new hypothesis: d) Steph is struggling with tax law. which also fits the observations, then we can design an experiment: 1) Take the trash out while Steph is still struggling with tax law. 2) Explain tax law to Steph. 3) Fail to take the trash out after Steph understands tax law. 4) Compare expressions caused by 1) and 3) and determine which is a match for the observed expression produced by the unknown cause. Now if the expressions are so similar that both are classed as matching, then we have _two_ valid theories. They may be different but _neither_ is wrong. What many people fail to realise is that we are _not_ forced to make a choice. The purpose of science is to predict so since both speculations give the same prediction it doesn't matter which one you use. On a day when Steph is either struggling with law or Phil hasn't taken out the garbage, her expression will be correctly predicted. Now: Given: Redshift indicates that galaxies are separating at an accelerated pace. No. Given: a) Redshift is observed. b) No relevant cause of redshift is known other than Doppler and the "gravitational redshift" predicted by GR. c) Gravity should cause matter to clump together hence what we see should not exist if it was 'steady state'. d) Expansion provides dynamic stability e) GR describes local gravitational effects exactly. f) No other current theory can describe all the effects predicted by GR which have been confirmed. we can conclude that, pending a viable alternative, the galaxies we observe at high redshift are moving away due to expansion as described by GR. Assuming that distant galaxies are at an extreme distance which can be predicted by their redshift, SNe in them should also be dimmer than nearby SNe of similar intrinsic brightness. GR includes a "cosmological constant" (CC) whose value is not determined by the theory but must be found by measurement. It has also been suggested that there is something called "quintessence" which drives accelerating expansion. Given: h) Sne at high redshift differ in brightness from the value predicted by GR assuming CC=0 and no quintessence. i) The brightness matches the value for some non-zero value of CC. j) The brightness matches the value for some non-zero value of quintessence. we would conclude that both are valid theories. Further given: k) The angular power spectrum measured by WMAP is a good match to that predicted by GR with the same value of CC as in i). l) The angular power spectrum measured by WMAP is a poor match to that predicted by GR with the same value of quintessence as in j). We now conclude that the combination of GR and the non-zero cosmological constant is the current best tool for prediction. George's explanation: Must be an accelerated expansion powered by dark energy. Phil's explanation: Who knows, maybe George is correct but maybe they are acellerating in a gravity field. Two objects moving apart and being acted upon by mutual gravity should slow their relative motion as the kinetic energy is used up increasing the potential energy. If the speed is increasing then extra energy is being introduced into the system of an unknown, mysterious or 'dark' nature. The phrases "acelerating in a gravity field" and "dark energy" are synonymous. Steph's explanation: Angels are blowing them around for fun. Its just impossible to not be presented with choices and we inevitably choose among them. That's why science is, in some measure, subjective. It is sometimes not possible to avoid being presented with a choice but you are wrong when you say "we inevitably choose". Science does not choose, it says clearly that all the alternatives are valid until they are proven false. Thus for example some people think we have to choose whether there is an aether or not but for conditions where SR is adequate we can equally assume a Lorentzian aether. The predictions are identical hence both theories are valid and no choice needs to be or can be made. In fact no choice _can_ be made on the basis of limited data where SR is adequate and we have to invoke Occam's Razor. It is only when GR is needed that the Lorentzian model fails because it offers no model for predicting the effects of gravity. Cosmology isn't one of those cases. With some minor variations which are essentially indistinguishable at present, we have only one theory of gravity that is valid in all situations and that is GR. In fact even that doesn't marry with QM so the real situation is that we have to choose for a list of _zero_ valid theories of quantum gravity. George |
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