I think people are suspicious of physics because they don't realize just how much we perceive filtered through our own experiences, and so conclude that some things they find counterintuitive just can't be.Starglider wrote: Sadly, no. I just bought a copy of Quantum: A Guide for the Perplexed for my father, which is IMHO an excellent popular science level introduction to the field. But many people have the bizarre conceit that the universe should be simple and easy to comprehend, and that the physicists with their counterintuitive notions and known flaws/gaps in their theories must be wrong, and cranks like this plug right into that. It's the same psychology that makes people buy into religion - and of course the very worst cranks (Tipler...) combine bad physics and religion into a perfect storm of bullshit.
For example, flight. Witness the history of flight - people first thought that flapping wings were the only way to fly because that's everything they ever saw.
Flying with fixed wings is completely counterintuitive to someone who never saw an airplane before. This approach shows more when the concept is even more complicated: I've heard people say there is no way the Apollo astronauts could have flown to the moon in the time given by NASA, because the Moon is 380 thousand kilometers away, while the Space Shuttle needs 66 hours to reach a space station that is just 200 kilometers up!
Of course, that's true in our limited Earthly experience, but spaceflight is completely counterintuitive...untill you learn about it and experience it, then it becomes obvious how things work.
In short, people will always long for ridiculously simple explanations for everything, because they want to feel that their life experience is worth something - I mean, it works 99% of the time, except when you have to make a nuclear reactor. But what makes those geeks so much more qualified for it than me? It can't be that complicated! - they feel dumb, and it doesn't matter that most people simply don't need to know or apply the more esoteric knowledge. They still feel dumb.