if you don't mind being labelled as a 'crackpot electro-universist'
Well, edd already did that. But hey, he's a astrophysicist. So he would know.
if you don't mind being labelled as a 'crackpot electro-universist'
So, it's just crackpots trading insults then. Internet forums business as usual.Well, edd already did that. But hey, he's a astrophysicist. So he would know.
Something for the weekend, Sir...Internet forums business as usual.
I hope we don't get too wrapped up in this 'we', 'us' thing. It is a perfectly acceptable term and refers to oneself and the consensus of opinion.
Are you serious? You mean, really?Your behaviour is tantamount to trolling.
There is no actual evidence that this dark matter exists. The notion is theoretical. Along with other equally valid theories, is one for discussion.
Are you serious? You mean, really?
Read your own posts, and tell me why they're not trolling if Slo-Mo-Shun's posts are.![]()
There is absolutely actual evidence. Evidence is not proof though. It is well supported but proof is a hazy concept and poorly understood or agreed upon, ranging from 'beyond reasonable doubt' to 'does not exist outside logic and mathematics'.
Personally I think it's open for a fair amount of discussion which is why it is fun and interesting.
I was trying to point in what you quoted up there that to say there was no evidence was wrong while conceding that the case was not as strong as we would like yet. I don't have certainties, and I think certainties are a dangerous thing for anyone to have. In the first post I made I mentioned the existence of sensible alternatives and I think it is unfair to frame me as some kind of attacking zealot.It might be more welcome if he would contribute to that discussion instead of simply attacking those he disagrees with with his certainties.
Funny that to me you're the one with religious-like agenda and behaviour here.I don't understand why BB and DM supporters defend their concepts so religiously that it eventually comes down to just waving their arms about saying 'It can't be anything else'.
I was trying to point in what you quoted up there that to say there was no evidence was wrong while conceding that the case was not as strong as we would like yet. I don't have certainties, and I think certainties are a dangerous thing for anyone to have. In the first post I made I mentioned the existence of sensible alternatives and I think it is unfair to frame me as some kind of attacking zealot.
As a universal explanation of cosmology, the Electric Universe theory should go the way of aether and phlogiston
Lack of observations that support the theory.What leads you to this conclusion that is it anything like those other concepts.
To continue the discussion, in my opinion: What Surfinjo in parts of his posts, and to me it seems Slo-Mo-Shun & Edd too try to say is that there are no certainties in these matters.
You just confirmed my theory and worst fear.We look to gravity for these things because it's the only force we know of that can work on long ranges without being shielded like electromagnetism
Electrostatic forces tend to get shielded by opposite charges. Since you're trying to explain how things are held together more tightly than usual you have to have reasonably balanced charges or stuff would fly apart, so you have to explain how charges remain separated in exactly the right way, and explain what that right way is.edd, I must apologize, I did not see your previous reply on Pg2:3am
You just confirmed my theory and worst fear.
Can you explain how electromagnetism is shielded in space?
then yes - I think if you want to introduce a theory to compete with one that explains a, b, c, and d, then you should probably come up with a theory that explains more than just a. I don't think that's really that unreasonable.The rest of your post is equally thin with a final, ohh, what's that term for "Solve all the Worlds problems and I'll believe you" kind of retort?
It's the standard Newtonian 1/r2 one, except when relativity is important which it isn't much except for gravitational lensing, and it's known to hold well out to solar system scales. We don't have good tests that that law holds on larger scales - we generally assume it does and include dark matter, but I am entirely ok with the suggestion that you modify it somehow on larger scales to fix things instead. I hinted at that quite strongly in earlier posts. It happens that while dark matter has its problems, and this approach of changing gravity has its problems too, I happen to feel that dark matter has fewer and less serious ones, but I completely agree that both warrant research and testing. When it comes to dark energy the two approaches are more evenly matched, and I'm even more open to alternatives. I also feel that the EU has multiple very serious difficulties that completely put it out of the running.And what is the measured and known distance-to-G force equation for gravity (that's the G) in space? (Do you see where this is leading and why dark 'matter' had to be 'invented'?)
I don't think I was particularly dancing around things, especially given I'm writing forum posts not a paper or a book. I don't think I'm particularly misusing gas or wind, unless you're referring to plasmas not being gases. Unfortunately astronomers do tend to talk that way and know what they mean when they do so, in much the same way they refer to every element heavier than helium as a metal when blatantly they aren't all metals. Calling, say, the intracluster medium a gas when it's clearly an extremely hot plasma is fairly commonplace. It's a terminology difference, an unfortunate one perhaps but commonplace.You keep dancing around the physical matter issues. And continue to ignore you own misuse of gas/wind. Please tell me what your gas and wind is made of.
Since you're trying to explain how things are held together more tightly than usual you have to have reasonably balanced charges or stuff would fly apart, so you have to explain how charges remain separated in exactly the right way, and explain what that right way is.
'Magnetic forces can be long distance', well there's a positive. Although it's not really. What is your 'can be' condition? How long are you referring?Magnetic forces can be long distance and you have to explain why both (as in the part you cut) affect say clouds of neutral hydrogen in the same way as plasma.
Maybe we can't "detect" them yet? Ha, take that Dark Matter. :}Obviously we know of galactic scale magnetic fields through synchrotron emission and measurements of Faraday rotation, but if the magnetic fields were big enough to support Peratt-type models then why don't we see the synchrotron emission those models predict?