Originally posted by marcus
Mentat, must compliment you on sparking interesting discussion and will throw out an idea in case you want to think about it maybe for future theads:
in several threads you have sort of equated Bojowald getting rid of the GR timezero singularity (his 2001 paper and followups by him and various) with a "bounce" predicted in M-theory, if I understand you. To me the things seem not analogous, you can see if this makes sense
cosmologists use GR to model evolution of cosmos and the model failed at time zero (singularity, breakdown of the the model at that limit of applicability and failure to predict past the limit)
and Bojowald quantized the Friedmann model in a way which happened to fix that glitch-----and it included matter and agreed with the classical limit which was merely the Friedmann model a very simple thing and it happened to predict prior contraction, i.e. a bounce
the important thing is not to predict the "bounce" the important thing is to fix the broken place in the theory which cosmologists use and think works
now cosmologists use GR to model the universe and they do not use Branes, as a rule.
so fixing a singularity in Branes or predicting a "bounce" in branes is fixing the wrong theory and whatever you predict it does not apply to contemporary cosmology.
Now it might in the future! one may speculate. And become relevant. Or it might not. But it does not seem to me to be analogous to quantum-patching over the actual BB singularity in the actual BB model that is being used.
I am wondering, Mentat, if you see that as a valid distinction or not.