There are only two options: objects are infinitely reducible, or there are things that are fundamental and irreducible. — Purple Pond
reality — Metaphysician Undercover
such as Aristotle's proposed dualism between matter and form — Metaphysician Undercover
it can't have a top or a bottom because then it could be reduced even smaller to the top part and the bottom part — Purple Pond
I suspect you are thinking of the particle as being made of 'stuff' (aka 'substance'). That way lie irresolvable paradoxes that Nagarjuna, amongst others, had great fund drawing out and playing with.How is it possible that a particle has no top nor bottom? — Purple Pond
That's not at all what Aristotle proposed. — CuddlyHedgehog
One way to avoid the paradoxes is to think of a particle as a force field. There is no 'stuff' to be seen, measured or split. All there is is certain repelling and attracting properties centred at a certain point in space. — andrewk
I see no reason to postulate an aether, nor any reason to postulate something to 'constitute spatial extension'. I see spatial extension as something that is brought to our understanding of the world by the mind, rather than an intrinsic property of the world. But even if that were not the case, I see no need to suppose that space is 'made of substance'.Wouldn't the forces have to act within some kind of substance, like the so-called aether? If there was no such aether what would constitute spatial extension? — Metaphysician Undercover
Wouldn't the forces have to act within some kind of substance, like the so-called aether? — Metaphysician Undercover
I see no reason to postulate an aether, nor any reason to postulate something to 'constitute spatial extension'. — andrewk
You have proposed forces, and points of interaction, along with "space", but if there is no substance to space, then all the things we observe are just imaginary, products of our own minds, like forces and points are generally considered to be. So you've just inverted everything, saying that the substance is not the object, it is the space. In other words you describe objects as a property of the substance, space, instead of describing space (via measurements) as a property of objects. — Metaphysician Undercover
Our work is done! We have a reciprocal formula that can flip the parts into wholes and the wholes into parts.
This is why there is all the current fuss over holography and the dualities of string theory. Mathematically, we can demonstrate that our best theories of the small scale can be reflected on to our best theories of the large scale, and vice versa. Like particle vs field, they are two views of the same thing essentially.
As ever, only the details need to be worked out. — apokrisis
If a true atom is irreducible and the smallest thing there is it can't have a top or a bottom because then it could be reduced even smaller to the top part and the bottom part. — Purple Pond
Aren't quarks irreducible? From what I recall, when one attempts to subdivide a quark, the combined matter and energy result in the creation of two quarks exactly alike the one you are attempting to split. — CasKev
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