No, we utilize non-dimensional points (and other mathematical constructions) as strictly hypothetical objects, and recognize that they do not have real existence. — aletheist
Which means, according to you, the Standard Model is wrong. — tom
No, it means that it is irrelevant within mathematics whether its strictly hypothetical models represent anything that really exists. In other words, a non-dimensional point does not necessarily have to represent something that is actually non-dimensional. — aletheist
Except that quarks, leptons, and bosons are point particles. — tom
A point particle (ideal particle[1] or point-like particle, often spelled pointlike particle) is an idealization of particles heavily used in physics. Its defining feature is that it lacks spatial extension: being zero-dimensional, it does not take up space.[2] A point particle is an appropriate representation of any object whose size, shape, and structure is irrelevant in a given context. For example, from far enough away, an object of any shape will look and behave as a point-like object.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_particle
The point I was making, which started this discussion is that we have no way to establish correspondence between the model and the reality, because the things are modeled as non-dimensional, and we have no way of conceiving of non-dimensional existence. If your argument is that the model doesn't necessarily represent the reality, then you are arguing that we should accept fiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
You can treat the Earth as a mathematical point too - a centre of gravity. And it works so long as you are far enough away not to be bothered by the Earth's material variations - the effect that mountain ranges would have for instance (coincidentally, Peirce's specialist area in science). — apokrisis
Likewise the standard model can call an electron a point. But then string theory or braid theory might discover an internal structure that shows the pointiness to be merely an effective theory of the real deal. — apokrisis
I accept real non-spatial existence, so my claim is that there are real things, demonstrated by physics to have real existence, which cannot be represented as having a spatial form. These things are non-spatial, non-dimensional. — Metaphysician Undercover
What things exactly? And what is their relevance to this discussion about modelling particles as located objects with no internal structure? — apokrisis
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