The Big Bang has one enormous advantage over its rivals before any evidence is discussed:
It owns the vocabulary.
That is not a small advantage. It is one of the deepest reasons the standard model feels stronger than it often is. Terms like “the age of the universe,” “the expansion of space,” “the Hubble constant,” “the early universe,” and even “the beginning of time” are not neutral labels. They are conclusions disguised as ordinary language.
Once those phrases become normal, the debate is already tilted.
BFUT is powerful partly because it notices this trap. It refuses to let vocabulary do the work that evidence should have to do. It asks whether the “Hubble constant” is truly constant, whether “expansion of space” is fact or interpretation, whether “early universe” is a local historical phase rather than a universal beginning, and whether “the age of the universe” is really the age of a model’s current story rather than the age of all reality.
That is a serious intellectual move.
Because many scientific cultures become more rigid through language than through data. Once a certain vocabulary becomes standard, alternative framings start sounding strange even when they may be more honest. People stop hearing the assumptions embedded inside the familiar phrases.
This is why BFUT’s insistence on new language matters. “Big Flare-Up” is not merely a replacement slogan. It is a refusal to let the birth-event framing dominate the imagination. “Gravitational sorting” is not a decorative phrase. It reorients the meaning of redshift. “Law of survival” forces readers to ask whether Hubble’s law may have been conceptually misread from the beginning.
This is how serious theory-building works. It does not just answer old questions. It also reclaims the language in which the questions are asked.
If you let your opponent define all the terms, you often lose before the first paragraph ends.
BFUT understands that.
And that is one reason it is more dangerous than many mainstream defenders realize.
Download the research paper: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19149786 (doi.org in Bing) Download the simulation code: https://zenodo.org/records/19124510 Watch the simulation work: https://vijayshankarsharma.com/