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] (]) 16:47, 14 November 2008 (UTC) ] (]) 16:47, 14 November 2008 (UTC)

**]. If you think that there is a problem with the ] approach to cosmology, the answer is to go out and get papers published, talk at conferences, and convinced the cosmologists that there is a problem. Using Misplaced Pages as a ] like this is simply not allowed. ] (]) 01:07, 15 November 2008 (UTC)

Revision as of 01:07, 15 November 2008

Fractal cosmology

Fractal cosmology (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) (delete) – (View log)

Original research synthesis. The only thing in this article that has been noticed by third parties were the attempts to measure the universe's fractal dimension which have been laid to rest in the last decade or so. That information can easily be discussed in the large scale structure article. The author draws together numerous disparate sources from the out-and-out crank to some relatively respectable ones. This isn't, however, an accurate, verifiable synthesis nor does "fractal cosmology" actually exist outside of this author's own webpages. ScienceApologist (talk) 20:58, 12 November 2008 (UTC)

  • Tu quoque. The point here is what is to be done with the article and this nomination. The earlier redirect and comments here show that the nominator thinks that the topic should exist on Misplaced Pages. Deletion is therefore not appropriate and a merge proposal should be made instead. This AFD should therefore be speedily closed as I indicated. Colonel Warden (talk) 10:51, 13 November 2008 (UTC)
  • Keep. There is no need to delete this article. Fractals, as applied to the large scale structure, represent a sound physical model that deserves a special article in Misplaced Pages. This is necessary to explain the problems and achievements of the fractal model of the universe to readers, which is difficult to accomplish in Large scale structure of the cosmos article without overburdening the latter with excessive details. I agree though that the article needs a cleanup. For instance, the last two sections should be removed, because they are just book reviews. However the article itself should stay. Ruslik (talk) 11:05, 13 November 2008 (UTC)
  • Keep. Well sourced, NPOV article on clearly notable topic (still notable even if not correct). Could do with some re-writing and maybe trimming, but AfD is not cleanup. Gandalf61 (talk) 11:25, 13 November 2008 (UTC)
  • Comment
As the primary author, I must remain neutral here but can offer additional info/insight, and redress inaccuracies in the above comments. I'll try to keep that tone, in this forum. Let me know if I get too evangelistic (i.e. - on a soapbox).
I've been studying the relationship between fractals and cosmology for more than 20 years, but hesitated to make any related contributions on WikiPedia, for fear I'd be tempted to write about my own work. This I have not done. I have steadfastly avoided references to any of my own papers, links to my website(s), etc. The reason I chose to create the Fractal cosmology WikiPedia entry was finding out (through a web search) that the topic name was redirecting to "Infinite Hierarchal Nested Universes" which covered a lot of material this article does not, but seemed rather unscientific, or 'over the Fringe line.' That is; it focused mainly on the views of those somewhat outside the world of established Science, and covered none of what work had been done by serious (or respected) researchers closer to the mainstream in their field. This is what I attempted to document.
FYI; I think I got the topic name (or saw the term) Fractal cosmology on Max Tegmark's web-site. I believe his statement was "Fractal Cosmology is dead!" but the term had a nice ring to it, and I saw it as a topic that was gathering momentum. My initial response was "Huh?". But I digress.
I have begun filling in the references for papers cited with journal publication info, as many did appear in peer-reviewed journals.
Re: merge suggestion - I agree that the application of Fractals to Cosmology has been mainly in large-scale structure, but this is increasingly not the case, as progress is made in quantum gravity, theories of ultimate unification, etc. Understanding the structure of spacetime appears crucial to resolving some of these issues. Moreover; dimensionality appears to be different at the microscale, in every flavor from String Theory/M-theory to Loop Quantum Gravity, Noncommutative Geometry, or Causal dynamical triangulation. And this raises the question of handling the transition from the ultra-small to larger scales, and how this affects renormalization of forces.
More later, JonathanD (talk) 16:21, 13 November 2008 (UTC)
p.s. - To see most of what was in "Infinite Hierarchal..." which has since been deleted, go to the link for the pages translated from Russian, at the bottom of the article. - JonathanD (talk) 16:24, 13 November 2008 (UTC)
So, this is a huge WP:OR and WP:SYNTH violation, and this comment is from the writer of the article and apparently the progenitor of the theory presented... Verbal chat 16:38, 13 November 2008 (UTC)
Ummm ... I am struggling to see how the conclusion "this is a huge WP:OR and WP:SYNTH violation" reasonably follows from the above comments by JonathanD. Gandalf61 (talk) 16:58, 13 November 2008 (UTC)
  • Question. In the above it says any references to "Chaos, Solitons, and Fractals" should be omitted. Is there something wrong with that journal, or just these particular papers. ? (from Delaszk (talk · contribs), who forgot to sign it).
    It's under the control of a "rogue editor", and publishes a substantial amount of utter gibberish. Some of the things it publishes are probably good -- maybe even most of them -- but unfortunately publication in that journal doesn't serve as a reliable indicator of validity. looie496 (talk) 17:34, 13 November 2008 (UTC)
  • Comment Cosmology covers the universe's evolution from its origin to its old-age or ending, and thus includes Physics from the ultra-small to the ultra-large scale domain. It admits observations, but gives us little opportunity to experiment, as we can see neither the universe's inception nor its full extent in the laboratory. Therefore what constitutes the empirical in Cosmology includes both Particle Physics and Astronomy, but is not limited to these studies. For that reason, much of what cosmologists use as evidence is data collected for other reasons, or in other disciplines.

The fact that I have shown how many different findings point in the same direction is significant to notability, for this topic, in my opinion. And I have included info from a wide range of sources. Thus, there may be a small amount of Synthesis involved in creating the article, since those studying the Planck-scale domain, for example, may not be aware of how their findings impact the evolution of Large-scale structure or the exact mechanism of inflation, but the collation of such info does not constitute Original Research.

If one reads the recent article on Causal dynamical triangulation in Scientific American, for instance, it is readily apparent that the authors of that theory are quite aware their work has profound implications for Cosmology, though it was originally framed as a theory of Quantum Gravity. Likewise for Martin Bojowald's recent article on Loop Quantum Gravity, in the same publication. The cover of that issue states "The Big Bang is Dead" so it's quite obvious he understands that the dynamics of reality in the ultra-small realm can affect how the universe evolves. And the list of those exploring those connections keeps growing.

So I deny Verbal's claim that what I've done is Original Research, or a unique Synthesis that is a theory of my own, and not something apparent to other scientists. Yes, I have theories of my own that involve this subject matter, but I have refrained from expressing my own opinions on the topic. Instead; I have solicited input and opinions from most of the scientists I cited (once I'd written something), to be sure I was taking a proper journalistic approach to this article and documenting their beliefs, rather than re-interpreting what they had published to fit my own world-view. And when some replied (several did), I corrected any inaccuracies they pointed out immediately.

Thus I'm fairly certain I haven't mis-represented any scholarly work on related topics, in order to create the appearance of a relationship, or for the purpose of proving any point of my own. All I did was highlight what was already in evidence from one source or another, and point out the obvious connections.

Thanks,

JonathanD (talk) 21:41, 13 November 2008 (UTC)

  • Comment It is good that WikiPedia archives past versions of a document, so that we can see what has been cut away, and so that relevant pieces can be reclaimed or restored later. I'm not clear either, why some of those references are considered offensive. I suppose the real question is "What constitutes Fringe science, what is pseudo-scientific, and what is over the fringe into non-scientific garbage?" I don't have a problem with C, S, & F or Professor ElNaschie and his theories. And I do not mind that some want to stick their heads in the sand and avoid change. I just wish they would refrain from compelling others to do so, where it's clear new answers are emerging, but it's uncertain what those answers are.

Perhaps it is simply the Einstellung effect, where the existence of good answers, or solutions that worked before, obscures the existence of better answers and solutions. Or maybe a paradigm shift in cosmology is required before people realize that we can't pick and choose, but must find answers that conform to both Relativity and Quantum Mechanics, that explain all the observed data and not merely a convenient subset, and which don't exclude part of what we know to explain some other piece.

JonathanD (talk) 16:47, 14 November 2008 (UTC)

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