- #1
The Binary Monster
- 30
- 0
I'd like to preface this by saying that I have limited knowledge in physics, and have not even studied it to degree level yet. But still, bare with me.
I have recently found that I find myself with growing unease whilst browsing the Internet or through my weekly New Scientist subscription... There seem to be a growing number of physics articles which trouble me, and I cannot help but feeling something is wrong somewhere.
Let me start with one example - The Higgs Boson. Many millions of dollars, euros and pounds are being spend on the search for this particle, this mysterious entity. But when reading about the basic principle I was concerned. Why should there be one particle which gives everything else a mass? The idea of a Higgs field worries me less, but when it comes to the Higgs Boson I often find myself thinking that something isn't right. Why would one particle be massive, and yet others have no mass at all without being subjected or connected somehow to this special particle? I probably do not know enough to be correct even in the questions I outline above, but perhaps you will see my point.
Another example is Dark Energy - the mysterious force which supposedly accounts for the expansion of our universe, it is a 'negative energy' if you will. This seems to be an overly imaginative explanation. I am not saying that we should not be imaginative in our ideas, but... for example, when I first read about and understood general and special relativity the ideas immediately felt right, and felt correct. They felt as if they were crazy - but real, and somehow beautiful. When I read about dark energy, I felt that someone somewhere had merely come up with an idea to explain away a problem which doesn't match our theories which our obversations. The idea feels somehow ugly.
I'd feel a lot more comfortable if scientists stopped trying to explain away anomolies or things we do not understand with outlandish ideas which are simply stuck on to the existing theories to save ditching them... I'm sure we'd make more progress by thinking more about the theories we already have. My view is this: don't create concepts or entities purely to keep existing theories viable - try to work the anomalous or unknown obversation into the theory itself, instead, or maybe start working on a new theory entirely.
Does anyone else feel the same?
Feel free to correct any of my (likely basic) mistakes, and I'd love to here any arguments for dark matter which weren't just concocted to try and keep our standard model viable.
:: Ben ::
I have recently found that I find myself with growing unease whilst browsing the Internet or through my weekly New Scientist subscription... There seem to be a growing number of physics articles which trouble me, and I cannot help but feeling something is wrong somewhere.
Let me start with one example - The Higgs Boson. Many millions of dollars, euros and pounds are being spend on the search for this particle, this mysterious entity. But when reading about the basic principle I was concerned. Why should there be one particle which gives everything else a mass? The idea of a Higgs field worries me less, but when it comes to the Higgs Boson I often find myself thinking that something isn't right. Why would one particle be massive, and yet others have no mass at all without being subjected or connected somehow to this special particle? I probably do not know enough to be correct even in the questions I outline above, but perhaps you will see my point.
Another example is Dark Energy - the mysterious force which supposedly accounts for the expansion of our universe, it is a 'negative energy' if you will. This seems to be an overly imaginative explanation. I am not saying that we should not be imaginative in our ideas, but... for example, when I first read about and understood general and special relativity the ideas immediately felt right, and felt correct. They felt as if they were crazy - but real, and somehow beautiful. When I read about dark energy, I felt that someone somewhere had merely come up with an idea to explain away a problem which doesn't match our theories which our obversations. The idea feels somehow ugly.
I'd feel a lot more comfortable if scientists stopped trying to explain away anomolies or things we do not understand with outlandish ideas which are simply stuck on to the existing theories to save ditching them... I'm sure we'd make more progress by thinking more about the theories we already have. My view is this: don't create concepts or entities purely to keep existing theories viable - try to work the anomalous or unknown obversation into the theory itself, instead, or maybe start working on a new theory entirely.
Does anyone else feel the same?
Feel free to correct any of my (likely basic) mistakes, and I'd love to here any arguments for dark matter which weren't just concocted to try and keep our standard model viable.
:: Ben ::
Last edited: