PeterDonis said:
I don't see a prediction of three generations of fermions (e.g., electron, muon, tauon, and their corresponding neutrinos and quarks) in the paper. I see a derivation of the gauge group SU(3) x SU(2) x U(1), but the SM contains three copies of this group (at least for the fermions), one for each generation, not just one. Of course you could construct a model with three copies of your underlying lattice, but why must it be three?
No, the fermions of the theory are described by Aff(3) \times \mathbb{C} \times \Lambda(\mathbb{R}^3) which contains already three generations. \mathbb{C} \times \Lambda(\mathbb{R}^3) are eight complex fields, an electroweak doublet, and an affine matrix is 3 x (1+3), so all this corresponds to three generations times (one lepton plus three quark) doublets.
PeterDonis said:
People start threads in BTSM (or threads that get moved there) because they have questions about string theory or LQG or some other theory that goes beyond the current Standard Model (which in this context includes GR). If someone saw your paper on arxiv or in a journal and had a question about it, that forum is where the post would properly go.
So, as I have guessed, all speculations are equal, but some are more equal. Namely those supported by the scientific mainstream, because only those have a chance to raise questions by young physicists who may hope for grants in such a direction.
But I see, the rules are even more open for their clear preference for established speculations. To quote:
BTSM rules said:
All threads in this forum are intended for discussion of the scientific content of well-researched models of physics beyond the Standard Model that have been published in peer-reviewed journals.
This forum may not be used to propose new ideas or personal theories. All threads of this nature that are started in this forum will be removed by Mentors.
In other words, established speculative theories (named "well-researched") are welcome, new speculative theories are forbidden, even if the already published results of the new theories are much better than what the established theories have reached during their whole lifetime.
So, your forum is clearly and obviously, by the rules, designed to favor established speculative theories against new competitors. And, of course, it makes no sense to propose a modification of the rules to make them fair. They have not been designed to be fair, but designed to favor the establishment. Such is life, in politics as well as in science. Every lobby in every parliament of the world manages to design laws which favor themselves and harm competitors, so there is no reason to expect that this may be different in science.
As a new competitor I depend on loopholes in such regulations - in this case, I have used the loophole that I'm allowed to answer false claims about the nonexistence of some theories with a reference to a publication of such theories.
Dale said:
If the observable results are the same then the theory with fewer free parameters is scientifically preferable. But since the computation hasn't been published it is still a bit speculative to make that claim on PF.
The equations have the Einstein equations of GR as the limit \Xi,\Upsilon \to 0, the additional terms do not depend on derivatives of the metric and become otherwise large only where the preferred coordinates become singular. For \Xi>0 ,\Upsilon < 0 the additional degrees of freedom behave like simple massless dark matter, thus, will not cause anything problematic. So all what one has to expect from computations given the GR prediction is viable are upper bounds for the \Upsilon> 0 case.
Explain your point about preferability to all the string theorists and supersymmetry and GUT lovers.
Dale said:
So then why did you put that word in there? That seems like a really bad choice on your part.
I thought this is science, and not a domain where political correctness matters.
Dale said:
You believe that you have an absolutely revolutionary theory that is rejected, not based on any flaws of the theory, but on a simple word choice. So why didn't you choose a different word and reap the professional rewards of your theory?
Sorry, no. It was not rejected, but, finally, accepted by Foundations of Physics. And I know already that even a PRD publication would not change the situation at all. A research direction which can offer absolutely not a single grant has no chance, published or not.
Dale said:
If your theory is as truly revolutionary as you believe then someone will take it and present it without that word, and then this paper will just serve as a citation in the new paper.
No. The preferred frame is anathema even if I do not use the e-word. To work in this domain would be, without a permanent position in the background, scientific suicide, because there are no interested journals, no conferences, no positions, no grants, nothing. If a young scientist would find my theory interesting and show some interest working in this direction, I would have to warn him.
I have had the funny experience of writing a rejection to a published paper, where even the author, heavily criticized in the paper, has recommended publication, but it was nonetheless rejected. Too much ether.