This only changes the necessary starting conditions. Just because we assume a different set of starting conditions does not falsify the idea.
IT CHANGES THE AMOUNT OF INFLATION AND THUS THE AMOUNT OF RED SHIFT. THE DEGREE OF REDSHIFT MEASURED IN THE REAL WORLD MATCHES WITH THE SCIENTIFIC MODEL AND NOT WITH BOB'S.
And, once again, you're the only one assuming (actually plain making up). The scientific model is derived from observation.
I take it this is concession that my ideas reflect accurately what Bob was proposing...?
Yes. I'd missed that part of bob's notion. It just makes it sillier.
It is based on what we see. We simply disagree on the means by which we got here.
It is not based on what we see. At no point has bob reasoned from observational evidence to his notion; if he had he could not have come up with his notion as it is contradicted by observation.
To support a theory of how things were, but are not now, requires observations that agree with the idea from outside sources. So observational evidence that inflation happened recently and quickly rather than a long time ago and slowly means finding evidence that the universe is young. One cannot use starlight to show this when the assumption of how and when starlight got here is what we are trying to prove.
There is not a single assumption about age involved in the Big Bang theory; all statements about the age of the universe are derived from, and supported by, observation. The total failure of your notion to be able to provide this speaks volumes about it.
What observations do you have to show that inflation happened mostly a long time ago and before stars formed?
All of them. Frankly I'm not going to get involved in discussing the evidence for the Big Bang in this thread. Instead you can stick to defending your idea.
Well, not to be rude, but a "negative-pressure vacuum energy density" used to describe the early universe's actions sounds about as descriptive as "God did it".
Your lack of understanding of science says nothing about its level of description.
I do not believe Bob's proposal requires specially determined blue shifted stars.
Yes it does. Because Bob's notion requires vastly more expansion of the light we see than the scientific model, the light we see should be vastly red shifted. It isn't. The only possible way that bob's notion can be correct and match observation is if the pre-inflationary stars emitted light of much, much higher wavelength (blue shifted) - in a specific way that matches the observed spectral patterns - so that when red shifted by the inflation it gets converted to match the light we see.
I believe it requires everything in the same relative position and velocities as it was just after expansion. Then I believe expansion converted all those velocities, masses and associated light waves into today's situation.
Which requires fudging on a massive scale. Each star needs to blue shift its output - as discussed above - but the degree of blue shifting required will depend on the distance from the Earth.
Not only that but since we can observe many, many other features of stars and spectral objects and each of these has to be carefully fine tuned to match the observed values when red shifted by expansion.