MOND vs. dark matter in light of historical parallels
Mordehai Milgrom

TL;DR
This paper reviews Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND) as an alternative to dark matter, comparing its development, predictions, and implications with historical scientific paradigm shifts like Copernican revolution and relativity.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of MOND's main aspects, its predictions, and parallels with historical scientific paradigm changes, highlighting its potential significance in cosmology.
Findings
MOND predicts specific galactic laws verified by observations.
The MOND constant $a_0$ may have cosmological significance.
Historical parallels suggest MOND could represent a paradigm shift.
Abstract
MOND is a paradigm that contends to account for the mass discrepancies in the Universe without invoking `dark' components, such as `dark matter' and `dark energy'. It does so by supplanting Newtonian dynamics and General Relativity, departing from them at very low accelerations. Having in mind readers who are historians and philosophers of science, as well as physicists and astronomers, I describe in this review the main aspects of MOND -- its statement, its basic tenets, its main predictions, and the tests of these predictions -- contrasting it with the dark-matter paradigm. I then discuss possible wider ramifications of MOND, for example the potential significance of the MOND constant, , with possible implications for the roots of MOND in cosmology. Along the way I point to parallels with several historical instances of nascent paradigms. In particular, with the emergence of the…
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