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Tyrs WolfDaemon

(2,289 posts)
15. When I was little, my sister always blamed me for anything that happened to her
Sat Sep 1, 2012, 07:30 PM
Sep 2012

One day I got tired of it and told her a secret.
I explained that everything was made of atoms and that atoms have a lot of empty space in them. I even drew out diagrams (At least as well as a fourth grader could) to explain it to her. I then told her that if she believed hard enough and ran fast enough, she could pass through anything.

For a few days she was constantly running into the doors and walls of the house. It took that long for my parents to convince her that it wasn't possible. She told them that I explained it to her and it was all my fault.
I acted all innocent and said that she simply misunderstood what I told her.

Considering all the 'jokes' my parents would play on us, they let the tricking of my sister slide.

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imo yes proud patriot Sep 2012 #1
Try sticking your hand through a solid object flyingfysh Sep 2012 #2
Ouch! That was bad advice. ZombieHorde Sep 2012 #3
We only perceive a very small part of reality johnd83 Sep 2012 #4
I take comfort in that thought. nt ZombieHorde Sep 2012 #34
solid objects are objectively solid in the sense that we can't pass thru them phantom power Sep 2012 #5
I blame quantum myself intaglio Sep 2012 #6
A science assembly project Generic Other Sep 2012 #7
Perception is strictly a subjective experience. Jim__ Sep 2012 #8
I see you are predicting some of my future OPs. ZombieHorde Sep 2012 #9
One of my favorite illusions ... eppur_se_muova Sep 2012 #11
Color is definitely a mental construct... DreamGypsy Sep 2012 #18
No. That "empty" space is pervaded by fields, such as the EM field ... eppur_se_muova Sep 2012 #10
Thanks for the info. I like the magnet analogy, because it relatable. ZombieHorde Sep 2012 #12
Exactly. Igel Sep 2012 #13
That is really interesting to me. Thanks for posting. nt ZombieHorde Sep 2012 #14
It's actually electron degeneracy pressure that keeps atoms from collapsing... DreamGypsy Sep 2012 #17
Well, that's what keeps the electrons in atoms from collapsing inward ... eppur_se_muova Sep 2012 #19
DAMMIT, you beat me to the magnet analogy! Odin2005 Sep 2012 #24
When I was little, my sister always blamed me for anything that happened to her Tyrs WolfDaemon Sep 2012 #15
So naughty! ZombieHorde Sep 2012 #16
Yeah, but when she invents the oscillation overthruster, won't you look silly ! eppur_se_muova Sep 2012 #20
It will never happen Monkey-Boy! Bigbooté is watching her! Tyrs WolfDaemon Sep 2012 #21
Beat me to it. Stryder Sep 2012 #30
This message was self-deleted by its author kickysnana Sep 2012 #22
That's so mean, but hilarious! Odin2005 Sep 2012 #25
"Solidity" is an emergent phenomenon of... Odin2005 Sep 2012 #23
Sigh! No! It is an expression of Quantum Electrodynamics. longship Sep 2012 #26
Solidity is... Speck Tater Sep 2012 #27
Funny, but the analogy of repulsive parents seems to fit. nt ZombieHorde Sep 2012 #33
Sorry, but atoms are not "mostly empty". DetlefK Sep 2012 #28
By "subjective," I did not mean imaginary, I meant subjective to our size. ZombieHorde Sep 2012 #31
Then yes. DetlefK Sep 2012 #39
How do you know atoms are mostly empty space except through perception? GodlessBiker Sep 2012 #29
Well, I have not personally perceived nothing about individual atoms, only clumps of atoms. ZombieHorde Sep 2012 #32
Rutherford's gold foil experiment is how we found out that atoms are mostly empty space johnd83 Sep 2012 #36
I learned something! nt ZombieHorde Sep 2012 #35
Being that we all experience the phenomenon of solidity the same, then gtar100 Sep 2012 #37
I was thinking subjective due to our size. ZombieHorde Sep 2012 #38
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