BoomBoom said:
I am new here so forgive me if I seem ignorant, but we have absolutely no idea of what the universe looks like "right now". For all we know, we could be in a "Big Crunch" and all the galaxies could be converging.
The most recent example we know of about what the universe is actually doing is Andromeda correct? ...and that galaxy is heading right for us (or us to it)
I for one, find it a stretch to assume based on redshifts that our entire universe came from a singularity. That is quite an extreme jump in logic, to say the least.
The logic is a little more complicated than that.
First of all, redshifts do give us convicing evidence that distant objects are moving away from us, especially when combined with other evidence such as the light curves from supernova.
Methods of trying to account for the redshift such as tired light have been tried and discarded. There is no way that a "tired light" model can explain the fact that distant supernovae appear to happen in "slow motion" compared too nearby supernovae.
Tired light also has other problems, such as a prediction of a general "smearing" of momentum, this is discussed on for instance Ned Wright's cosmology page (along with the supernovae results).
So, if everything is moving away from us now, it is hardly a stretch of logic to say that in the past, everything must have been closer together than it is now.
Taking the logic all the way back to a singularity requires a little more than this. It basically follows from attempting to model the universe within the context of GR, which is our most successful theory of gravity.
Current cosmology comes in large part from General Relativity. People are continuing to test this theory, though so far GR has held up very well in all the predictions its made. (GPB is an example of the sort of current tests that are being done - so far, GR appears to have passed).
Thus, our best candidate for understanding the universe is an initial period of extremely rapid inflation, followed by a slower period of more gradual expansion.
Furthermore, this theory makes important predictions that have been tested, the existence of the cosmic microwave background radiation. If the universe was initially very small, it must have also been very dense. The CMB is predicted to come from light that was emitted when the universe first became transparant. The expansion of the universe has redshifted this light into the microwave spectrum.
Any successful theory is going to have to explain the observed redshifts, avoid the known problems with tired light, and also explain the existence of the cosmic microwave background. Current big bang theory explains all of these observations.