
Originally Posted by
antoniseb
Without getting too involved in String Theory ideas, you can't really say much about what caused inflation... and it is certainly valid to look for alternatives that explain what it explains. Really, at this point, the direction of science of inflation is to quantify what we are seeing well enough that it can eventually give us the framework for some more elegant theory.
One of the things that you've been saying or alluding to in you many posts, is that the Big Bang, and Inflation, and Dark Matter, and Dark Energy are not theories which have some first principles the way General Relativity does. GR is testable (and will eventually need to be superseded by something that can also be compatible with QM). It is so elegant... that it has pretty much spoiled it for you. Nothing less elegant seems right to you, and lets be pragmatic, LCDM is a model and framework for increasing the quality of our measurements, and for giving context to observations.
This whole thing (BBT, GR, DM, DE, etc) is the state of things as we see them today. Some people dismiss it all as "epicycles", by which they (hopefully) mean that we are making measurements that get us to a model that predicts and explains what we see to within the limit of our ability to measure, using tools we know how to use (epicycles were a mathematical technique to make very good predictions of the positions of the planets). Copernicus made an innovation which reduced the number of epicycles from 86 to 43... He was still working with circular motions superimposed on each other. That change came from working with the refined observational data of himself and his predecessors... and then 65 years later, Kepler went one step further, and found the ellipses, and epicycles got their bad name... and then a century and a half later Newton gave some reasonable explanation for Kepler's laws.
So I suspect that you are mostly complaining that we aren't at the equivalent of Newton's place in this parallel to planetary theory... we are still working out the details of how things work and move and more. But let's point out that like the Planetary Theorists, we are right now working (as always) at the very limits of what our technology will let us see, but now the problem we are looking at is something that is intertwined both at the largest possible scale and the smallest, and our ability to have many people working together and in parallel on scientific endeavors is far beyond anything from Copernicus' time.
We know we are working with models, and make no claim that the ultimate truth of these things is known. We are on the hunt for that truth... and we have a pretty good sense of what we know and don't know. We'd be happier with your complaints if you'd listen when we answer them, and maybe read the papers we point you to.