Sign up for the Freethink Weekly newsletter!
A collection of our favorite stories straight to your inbox
In science, ideas require experimental or observational validation.
These five ideas, although brilliant, simply disagreed with reality.
1.) The Steady-State Universe.
Was the Universe not merely the same throughout space, but across time?
The Cosmic Microwave Background’s discovery disproved it.
Its perfect blackbody spectrum proves its cosmic origin; it isn’t reflected starlight.
2.) Our Universe will someday recollapse.
Could gravitation defeat cosmic expansion, causing a Big Crunch?
No; dark energy exists, dominating the Universe’s expansion.
Unless it decays away — an evidence-free assertion — space will expand forever.
3.) The hot Big Bang began from a singularity.
An expanding, cooling Universe demands a smaller, hotter, denser past.
But arbitrary early temperatures are disallowed; the Cosmic Microwave Background sets stringent upper limits.
They’re inconsistent with a singularity; an inflationary stage came first.
4.) The speed of gravity is infinitely fast.
Do gravity and light propagate at identical speeds?
Gravitational wave and gamma-ray observations of 2017’s kilonova event settled the issue.
They mutually travel at indistinguishable speeds to ~1-part-in-1015; infinite speeds are disallowed.
5.) Dark matter is simply “normal matter” that’s invisible.
Gravitational properties of colliding galaxy clusters,
oscillatory features in the Cosmic Microwave Background,
large-scale galaxy clustering,
and Big Bang nucleosynthesis
all necessitate dark matter’s presence.
This article was reprinted with permission of Big Think, where it was originally published.
Sign up for the Freethink Weekly newsletter!
A collection of our favorite stories straight to your inbox