marcus said:
If you want, I will sift thru Ellis essay and quote a few things he says.
If that is to your purpose.
...
Wolram, George Ellis has coauthored a book with Stephen Hawking and he is a respected figure in cosmology. Maybe a bit on the old side but not retired. A few years younger than Hawking.
Here is a sample of the kind of thing he says in that article, look on page 25:
=====quote====
4.2.3 Determining the RW parameters Given that a RW geometry is a good description of the observable universe on a large scale, the further issue is what are the best-fit parameters that characterize it, selecting the specific universe we observe from the family of all FL models (Sec.2.1). Important observational issues are:
• Determining the Hubble parameter H0, which sets the overall scale of the observed universe region.
• Determining the trio of the density parameter Omega_0, deceleration parameter q_0, and cosmological constant Lambda (or equivalently the density parameter Omega_Lambda), which are the major defining characteristics of a specific Friedman-Lemaitre model. The CBR data, supernova observations, deep number counts, source covariance functions, velocity measurements, and gravitational lensing observations can determine these quantities.
• Determining the sign of the curvature k,
showing whether the universe has closed spatial sections and also whether it is possible for it to recollapse in the future or not. Analyses of the observations
should always attempt to determine this sign, and not assume that k = 0 (as is often done).
• Various parameters are used to characterize the nature of dark matter (Sec.2.3.6) and dark energy (Sec.2.3.5). As their dynamics is unknown, these too have to be determined observationally.
=====endquote=====
So, for instance, he is critical of his fellow cosmologists, at least of the run-of-the-mill university cosmologist, because they often simply ASSUME that k = 0 exactly. That is, they favor the EXACTLY FLAT case so much that they oftentimes just take it for granted, according to Ellis.
I have found this to be the case, but I expect the mentality of the ordinary professional cosmologist is probably going to change gradually, partly because of gentle criticism like this from Ellis and partly because of better data.
Ellis says that instead of taking the Omega exactly = 1 case for granted, that it is the cosmologist job to FIND OUT the sign of k, that is, whether Omega is less or equal or greater than 1.
A related question is whether the spatial slices come around and close on themselves---which would make the universe FINITE. Ellis, a mainstream cosmologist who is able to take a critical look at his own profession, says that it is a cosmologist job to measure and FIND OUT if the universe is finite (one way is by measuring curvature) and not just take for granted because you favor this or that.
The astronomy building is just a stone's throw from here. I used to spend time in their coffee room some. I will have to drop in on some grad students before long and see what they are saying. I will let you know when i do.
If you read Ellis you can find more criticisms of the state of the profession. they are mild and it is a lot of work to read his long essay. I will sift through some more if you want. or if this is not what you want let me know