Talk:Infinite divisibility

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Is there any reason quarks could not be divisible or any reason that whatever quarks can be divided into could not also be divisible?

The infinite divisibility notion in physics distinguishes btwn infinite cuttability (an atom is not cuttable into other units that take up space) and divisibility. Perhaps clairfying what divisibility means would help resolve my question above.

Jeffrey Grupp reference needs to be removed. He has a bad habit of filling wikipedia with self-citations. He is also listed in nihilism entry.

Just to let you know I like your way of thinking! I tend toward an Alternative View of Relativity so I found insight among your thoughts or conceptions which focused my thinking along new lines. As I tend to make a distinction as a (elementary) particle is matter => has inertial mass & occupies space, so perhaps Fundamental Particle could be used as distinction between those particles w/o mass? On the other hand one could say that anything < the atomic particles => nuclear particles {impling they only exist within the bound of the nucleus}?

Clay 10:50, 25 November 2007 (UTC) Clay