Negating the need for anything actually solid

dimanche 29 juin 2014

If it’s true that every atom has negatively charged electrons on its outer shells, and if it’s true that all matter is made of such electrons, be it our finger or a mountain or a planet, (meaning that all ‘things’ are negatively charged) and if it’s further true that what appears is not necessarily what is ‘out there’ (since we have limited perceptive abilities which are then interpreted by our brains,) then can it be accurately stated that when we touch something, we may not be actually touching, but rather sensing the repelling force of the negative charge of what appears to us as our finger and that which is being ‘touched’?



If so, there need not be anything solid (even though perceptively it seems to appear that way), but it may be forces of some kind repelling each other.



Similarly, motion may be the interaction of what appears as negatively charged ‘things’ being repelled by the positive charges of the medium in which we live.



Where have I gone wrong?





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