Huh? It was you who was trying to separate them remember:
Depends what you categorize plasma cosmology as. I define it as the study of the plasma universe, which see's no need for an
ex nihilo creationist perspective of the universe, and focusses on what processes are ongoing and fully experimentally verifiable, with a lot more attention given to plasma forces and electromagnetism than the traditional gravity and mass only models. This is what most PC proponents would also define it as. So Scotts material, and Thornhills, would fall under this scope, by this definition, as they are dealing specifically with EM forces and plasma effects in the cosmos.
But, it seems that this description is not accepted by most people here, in their opinion any form of cosmology has to be specifically about the observations that are used to prove the Big Bang. Now, Scott and Thornhill have not written anything about the CMB, dark matter, inflation, etc, or other things used to support the Big Bang, so according to many people here, its not categorized as cosmology, or plasma cosmology. Only the material from Peratt, Snell, Lerner and other plasma cosmologists that do address these observations usually associated with a Big Bang would be considered contributing to plasma cosmology. I'm fine with working with this, as I really dont see what difference it makes what group you put work into. Thus why from this viewpoint (the predominant viewpoint of most people in this thread) the work of Scott, Thornhill and their colleaugues is not about plasma cosmology, which is why I said that.
As I said, continual discussion of which category this person, or this prediction, or this theory, fits into does nothing to progress the issue at hand. Each piece of material should be judged on its individual merits, not just stereotyped into a certain group and dismissed. It doesn't help that not much of this material has been discussed here yet either, people are judging it at face value, and often from abstracts only.
...Now to get to DRD's last few posts...
I've briefly read through your posts, and since you didn't create a clear list of your direct refutations of plasma cosmology, like I recommended, I'll have a quick go to see exactly what your getting at, so I can try to respond in the near future.
Please add anything I have missed.
***post #117
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=3683237&postcount=117
Nothing?
***post #118
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=3683316&postcount=118
This post is complaining about a couple of sentences in Eastmans paper. Other than that, Nothing? (and you may want to re-read "The contribution of brown dwarfs to the local mass budget of the Galaxy", the abstract does not really reflect their full conclusions accurately)
***post #119
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=3683385&postcount=119
Nothing?
Maybe this?
"Specifically, the most concrete example is rotation curves of spiral galaxies and the doing away for a need for CDM (it's the third reference in [14]) ... in this case, PC falls splat! on its face, both in terms of a viable alternative explanation and failing to address the bulk of the universe's CDM (hint: it's not in the halos of spiral galaxies, but elsewhere!)"
I'm really not sure of the specifics of what you are claiming here, and how it directly invalidates PC.
***post #120
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=3683462&postcount=120
1. "Lerner is proposing that the universe becomes opaque to microwaves below a certain frequency, is transparent above that frequency (it's actually more of a range than a sharp frequency cutoff), and that the scale-length for opacity is a few Mpc (the paper is rather weak on what bounds there should be for this).
[...]However, the universe is, apparently, quite transparent, to microwaves and radio, way out to z ~5 (there's more of course, but that will do for now)."
***post #124
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=3684272&postcount=124
2. Peratt's 'no CDM' spiral galaxy model is inconsistent with estimates of the amount of CDM from gravitational lensing
3. Oddly, Elerner does not also mention that the WMAP team's analysis of the CMB produces an estimate of large-scale structure that is completely consistent with that from teams like SDSS; nor does he mention the observational detection of BAO (baryon acoustic oscillation) in the 'local' universe. It's a relatively simple matter to put these together, and show that an 'eternal' PC universe would not, and could not, resolve Olbers' paradox, even with Lerner's tired light.
***post #125
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=3684546&postcount=125
Nothing?
or maybe this?
"(section I; which I may cover in a later post), most of what Lerner wrote in the other two sections has been overtaken by subsequently published observations, which the Wikipedia page at least acknowledges (and which I have said pretty much demolish the case for PC)." Care to ellaborate?
***post #142
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=3685384&postcount=142
Nothing?
***post #143
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=3685419&postcount=143
Nothing?
***post #144
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=3685462&postcount=144
4. Now comes the PC-killer point in the logic chain (at least, PC per Lerner, and now Zeuzzz): the large-scale, average motions of stars, gas, plasma (etc) in galaxies can be accounted for entirely by the gravity due to the mass in the galaxies acting on the mass in the galaxies (enter the usual caveats, e.g. about colliding/merging galaxies).
5. Lerner puts great store in observations of a small number of high velocity ('halo') white dwarfs observed recently. He shouldn't, and should know better ... the various microlensing surveys constrain any such populations to levels far below 'baryonic matter in the halo is sufficient to account for spiral galaxy rotation curves' (as do the various deep HST observations), and only the most irresponsible extrapolations of the actual, independently verified, astronomical observations would suggest they could anyway.
If I have missed any of your refutations of plasma cosmology, please add them to the list. And may I recommend you write up your findings disproving plasma cosmology, and submit it to be published and peer reviewed in a journal of your choice. Thats how science works after all, and you'd be doing what no-one so far has been able to do. That way any plasma cosmologist could respond to it in the future, which would certainly save me the time
And I would consider rethinking a couple of those points. Especially the ones about dark gnomes proving that PC is wrong for example.... they could end up backfiring on you....