geckzilla wrote:Especially with the notion that Big Bang could just poof and go away soon. There are a lot of BB skeptics out there in the world of lay people. They already don't realize how large the body of evidence pointing to the BB is. They have this idea that cosmologists are clueless and just made the whole thing up to sound smart. Due to the nature of science it is possible that it may one day be replaced with something else but it won't go out easily.
Well put, geck.
I think that the Big Bang is unpopular among many people, in many cases because they want to believe in Genesis rather than in any sort of science that contradicts their belief.
But more broadly speaking, there are a lot of ideas that many people would want to be true. And because many people would want them to be true, any claims on the parts of scientists that they may be true are likely to receive a lot of attention. Consider the following hypotheses and ask yourself which of them are likely to receive the most attention (let's assume that all of them were put forth by scientists):
1) Wormholes can exist/ Wormholes can't exist.
2)
It is possible to travel through a wormhole/ It isn't possible to travel through a wormhole, because the wormhole would collapse if you entered it.
3)
It would be possible to travel through a wormhole and emerge alive at a totally different location in the universe/ It would be possible to travel through a wormhole in the sense that it wouldn't collapse, but you would probably still be killed by the experience.
4)
If you didn't like the new location where you arrived after journeying through the wormhole, you could dive back into the wormhole and come back to where you started from/ It might be possible to survive the journey through a wormhole and arrive at a totally different location in the universe, but you could never go back again.
5)
NASA should design strategies to use wormholes to explore the universe/ Even if it is indeed possible to use wormholes to explore the universe, you can't use the wormhole unless you travel to it first, and it is likely to be thousands of light-years away. And since we haven't even been able to send people to Mars, it will be eons until we can send people to a wormhole.
As you can see, in each "hypothesis pair" one of the hypotheses would generate very much attention and great enthusiasm, whereas the other hypothesis would receive scant or no attention. Because of all the attention, the "popular" hypotheses would seem to be "true".
I think that the idea of wormholes that you could travel through, Star Trek style, would generate a lot more enthusiasm than the suggestion that there was no Big Bang. But in each case, the "popular" idea is likely to look more credible than it really is. Of course it is possible that scientists may eventually indeed come to the conclusion and consensus that there was no Big Bang, and for all I know it might be possible to travel through a wormhole, although I'm highly skeptical. But my point is that many people may get the impression that these popular ideas have been proven by a lot of evidence when they certainly have not.
I think we are dealing with the forces of demand and supply here. A lot of people demand wormholes, life on Mars, the colonization and terraforming of Mars, UFOs, crop circles, the bouncing universe and/or the abolition of the Big Bang, and there are many publications and various forms of mass media that would be happy to provide the public with proof of these popular ideas.
Ann