Furthermore there is yet a another, a third form of space. The space nothing can occupy. The void. The vacuum. If it is occupied it is not a vacuum. It is the true absence of anything material or substantial. — Benj96
What evidence is there, that a space as described by you in that quote, exists outside of your imagination — wonderer1
What evidence is there, that a space as described by you in that quote, exists outside of your imagination
— wonderer1
The definition of a vacuum. And the definition of spacetime. And the definition of object permanence and it's implications. — Benj96
The dimensions of matter are instrinsic to them. The distance between material is extrinsic to it. We wouldn't say what's the distance of an apple. We would say what are it's dimensions.
If there was no need to make distinctions why bother with different vernacular to describe them? — Benj96
Good question! All of the examples gave in the OP are not real things, but ideal metaphors of a substance necessary to prevent particular atoms from merging into one big block of matter. Each metaphor is referring back to the intuitive notion of "physical space", postulated by Democritus : that the real world can be boiled-down to rigid material Atoms and fluid metaphysical Void.What evidence is there, that a space as described by you in that quote, exists outside of your imagination? — wonderer1
It looks to me like you are trying to carve nature where there are no joints. — wonderer1
Not quite. There is also a form of space no one else can entirely occupy. That is the space we carry with us our entire life. Intractable and inescapable. The space of the self. Wherever one goes, there their body is. The space ones body always occupies by virtue of being material, physical, substantial. — Benj96
Furthermore there is yet a another, a third form of space. The space nothing can occupy. The void. The vacuum. If it is occupied it is not a vacuum. It is the true absence of anything material or substantial. — Benj96
In an ontological sense both spacetimes are 'here' in ontological space but being distinct geometries they are distinct universes. — EnPassant
Two different geometries can exist in the same ontological space. — EnPassant
So the space of the self, and general space are superimposed but are not equal. And that shows how truly complex the dimensions, definitions and meanings of space are. And how they relate to the things that occupy them, or don't. — Benj96
Physical space is an emergent property of matter. It is a physical object just like a table or a chair. Physical spacetime has an extra dimension, time. If the physical matter in the universe evaporates back to pure energy, physical spacetime disappears and we are left with the spacetime of energy. We would no longer have a 4D space. We would have something more exotic. Scientists speculate that quantum spacetime has 11 dimensions. — EnPassant
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