zhermes said:
I think bapowell's response really cuts to the core answer.
...
I think this is the response you meant. It does do the job, if only Homesick takes the trouble to think it through.
bapowell said:
Who's to say at this time? Many of the "theories" you mention (multiverses and the origin of the universe) are not theories, but more correctly identified as conjectures or hypotheses. They are as yet unsupported by physical evidence, and so cosmologists cannot, based solely on empirical data, advance any statement regarding their relative validity or reality.
However, as Mark points out, they do differ in important ways from a "broad creationist concept". First, they can be built from the extension of currently accepted physical theories, and are arguably required for the self-consistency of some of them. In some cases, these conjectures are predictive, so that they are in principle testable. Does your broad creationist concept offer testable predictions? If not, than it is not scientific. And, granted, if any of the conjectures entertained by cosmologists are not predictive (or falsifiable), then they too are not scientific.
In summary, until you offer a more detailed conception of the creationist theory or what God is and what his role in the universe is, any such proposal will not pass scientific muster.
My point was that Homesick's original premise is wrong. The community of professional cosmologists (not the popularizers and attention getter minority) is actually NOT very interested in discussing the stuff he was talking about. I'll try to make that point with some conference links.
Just for thoroughness I'll go back to GR18 (Sydney) which was in 2007. this is not the best---the links should get better.
http://www.oakland.edu/upload/templates/physics/mog30/node15.html
Here's a blogger reporting from conference, day by day:
http://kea-monad.blogspot.com/2007_07_01_archive.html scroll down to July 09 which is day one of the conference.
If I could find the programme my guess would be zero multiverse.
I should be able...Yes! Here is the program for GR19 (Mexico)!
http://hyperspace.aei.mpg.de/2010/03/08/gr19-scientific-program-update/
I see lots of cosmology talks but no "parallel--multiverse--nothingverse" what are youcallit.
Nothing wrong with yakking about that on your own time, but at a big triennial conference with 600-plus experts together for just one week, time is at a premium and you don't waste it on unnecessary speculative stuff. That's my impression. The next GR is GR20, in 2013 in Warsaw.
The triennial MarcelGrossmann meeting is an alternative to the GR, roughly the same topics and nearly as big. I'll look for programs for MG12 (Paris 2009) and MG13(Stockholm 2012).
It's interesting to see what these experts DO want to hear about and discuss when they get together. It certainly isn't parallel-multi-nothing stuff, as far as I can see. I have to go but will get back later with some links for MG12 and or MG13.