Sir, What does the "Big Bang Theory" would mean for you ?
I suspect that what you mean by the "Big Bang" is not the same as what the modern cosmologists mean for the same idea.
I'm speaking of all the researchers that at this very moment are working on trying to solve the big problems on the field, those who work on the "Physics and Astronomy" departments at Universities like: Caltech, UC Santa Barbara, Stanford, Cambridege (UK), Oxford, etc, etc.
So I'll be looking forward for your brief explanation. And I will reply you back :)
My answer to Dr. Franklin Uriel Parás Hernández' question from January 11, 2021:
January 13, 2021
Dear Franklin:
Thank you very much for your frank and fair and most important open letter from another continent.
I agree completely with you that such a catastrophe -- in case I am right -- has not occurred in the modern history of science before.
So it is very fortunate that I need not point to the recent new fundamental science of Cryodynamics as doing the job I described.
It was already Fritz Zwicky who in 1929 showed to the world that it is possible that all of humankind was in danger of entering a dark age if not accepting his insight that gases of mutually attractive particles exist in the cosmos.
This dark age has been holding true ever since: A singular historical situation indeed.
The shortest modern proof: Do kindly have a look at the now ten years old equal-rights sister discipline to the famous fundamental science of deterministic Thermodynamics, which I called Cryodynamics. This is the gas theory of mutually attractive particles. That is, it is a case in point of modern chaos theory.
Please, give me the benefit of the doubt. If I am right, I do indeed have to say that "we are living in interesting times" -- this worst possible verdict in science according to the Chinese tradition.
This situation admittedly is very unlikely to be holding true in reality. But this happens to be the case for once.
Thank you very much for your "coooperative skepticism." This is the definition of Science.
Could you please provide some background information or literature references? I never heard of “Cryodynamics” before. Moreover, all electrically neutral particles are mutually attractive because of gravitation, if sufficiently far apart. So where is the problem?