@article{Herndon_2021, title={Nature of the Universe: Astrophysical Paradigm Shifts}, volume={8}, url={https://journals.scholarpublishing.org/index.php/ASSRJ/article/view/9704}, DOI={10.14738/assrj.81.9704}, abstractNote={<p>Over my lifetime I have witnessed the decline of scientific capability and integrity in the physical sciences. When a new idea arises, it should be discussed and debated. Attempts should be made to refute the new idea; otherwise, it should be cited in subsequent literature. That is the way science progresses, not by attempting to suppress a new idea or failing that, to ignore it. But all too often, in instances of discoveries or insights that might cause major paradigm shifts, suppression or non-recognition is what happens. Here, I describe, from a first-person perspective, several paradigm shifts in astrophysics that have been systematically ignored, including the thermonuclear ignition of stars, the nature of dark matter, why vast numbers of galaxies have just a few prominent patterns of luminous stars, the origin of chemical elements, and a new speculation about the nature of the Universe.</p>}, number={1}, journal={Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal}, author={Herndon, J. Marvin}, year={2021}, month={Feb.}, pages={631–645} }