There are alternate explanations (“non-standard cosmology”) to the big kawoomba (also known as Big Bang), I remember this arxiv paper which I don’t claim to understand, related nature article from last year here. To quote: “If an atom were to grow in mass, the photons it emits would become more energetic. Because higher energies correspond to higher frequencies, the emission and absorption frequencies would move towards the blue part of the spectrum. Conversely, if the particles were to become lighter, the frequencies would become redshifted.” I guess I mostly root for alternate redshift explanation because yay contrarianism.
However, much of what you’re writing about isn’t physics, it’s using a few terms borrowed from physics but it’s mostly a philosophical interpretation with a large amount of poetic license, to put it favorably. In so far as you’d make a concrete prediction of an experiment, that could be falsified. People have trouble contradicting your theories because for a theory to be contradicted it would need to make a specific prediction, something which can be measured and then compared to what your theory predicts.
How do you measure “The wave also goes to the function of our brain.” or any of the other stuff? How would you either confirm or contradict it? A theory needs to satisfice two criteria to be considered correct: (1) It must not be contradicted by any evidence, and (2) it must be the shortest description of the phenomenon it purports to explain.
So while I imagine that many elements of your theories do stand up to “not experimentally contradicted”, that is because of their vague, verbose nature, which disqualifies them on complexity reasons*. In short, what you have seems less like a theory in the natural/physical sciences sense than a philosophy. Philosophies are perspectives on (mostly) life which provide a (hopefully helpful) mindset and ground some sort of telos: meaning-of-life, a grander scheme of things in which one has a place of some sort.
As such, they mostly fall into the not-even-wrong category … which can be fine, they can still serve some psychological purpose. Om and all that.
* Stuff seems to be moving away, simplest inference: Stuff was closer together in the past. Not “stuff is subject to some additional cosmic effect, additional as compared to the other explanation which needs no such add-ons.
Um, eh, well … welcome.
There are alternate explanations (“non-standard cosmology”) to the big kawoomba (also known as Big Bang), I remember this arxiv paper which I don’t claim to understand, related nature article from last year here. To quote: “If an atom were to grow in mass, the photons it emits would become more energetic. Because higher energies correspond to higher frequencies, the emission and absorption frequencies would move towards the blue part of the spectrum. Conversely, if the particles were to become lighter, the frequencies would become redshifted.” I guess I mostly root for alternate redshift explanation because yay contrarianism.
However, much of what you’re writing about isn’t physics, it’s using a few terms borrowed from physics but it’s mostly a philosophical interpretation with a large amount of poetic license, to put it favorably. In so far as you’d make a concrete prediction of an experiment, that could be falsified. People have trouble contradicting your theories because for a theory to be contradicted it would need to make a specific prediction, something which can be measured and then compared to what your theory predicts.
How do you measure “The wave also goes to the function of our brain.” or any of the other stuff? How would you either confirm or contradict it? A theory needs to satisfice two criteria to be considered correct: (1) It must not be contradicted by any evidence, and (2) it must be the shortest description of the phenomenon it purports to explain.
So while I imagine that many elements of your theories do stand up to “not experimentally contradicted”, that is because of their vague, verbose nature, which disqualifies them on complexity reasons*. In short, what you have seems less like a theory in the natural/physical sciences sense than a philosophy. Philosophies are perspectives on (mostly) life which provide a (hopefully helpful) mindset and ground some sort of telos: meaning-of-life, a grander scheme of things in which one has a place of some sort.
As such, they mostly fall into the not-even-wrong category … which can be fine, they can still serve some psychological purpose. Om and all that.
* Stuff seems to be moving away, simplest inference: Stuff was closer together in the past. Not “stuff is subject to some additional cosmic effect, additional as compared to the other explanation which needs no such add-ons.