Regarding Higgs boson, I only believe its existence when they get indisputable evidence with the Large Hadron Collider. That means repeatable, actual measurements which display behavior that can only be explained with the attributes that Higgs boson has. And even then this must happen with as capable colliders around the world. Until then it is a possibility and curiosity. Though I fail to see the practical importance of this Higgs boson. From what I know, it either only confirms or removes the concept of Higgs field, trashing or confirming years of theoretical research. I could actually venture so far and say that the science world is biased to find one, since otherwise they have been wasting tons of taxpayers' money.
I find it that nowadays Science has a worrifying trend to give a lot of weight for computer simulations and taking weight from measurements and observations. But I suppose that is because the measuring and observation equipment is expensive. Another thing I find annoying is the concentration on the extreme ends of the scales - well no wonder it is damn expensive! Either it has to be extremely small or massively big, but the normal world, no, that's boring and solved already.
Well, what do we know about Black Holes? I thought that the definition of Black Hole meant that no information can return after passing the event horizon. But it is four years since I read General Relativity so I might be little rusty about this. I seem to recall that the poor thing that passes it is rapidly going to hit the center, but good luck measuring that. I never thought about this before, but anything beyond Event Horizon is pure speculation from pure Physics point of view as this cannot be verified, unless we all decide to jump to event horizon and even then that knowledge would be rather short-lived. Thanks, I shall utilize this insight to annoy some friends from theoretical physics department to no end. So, no, I think I didn't get your analogy. How come we can expect the computer simulations to be any more accurate?
Mika