Post Number:#1
January 7th, 2012, 7:07 pm
Take a rock of any size.
Now, split it in two.
Is the rock now two rocks? Or is it still one?
If it is still one rock, then under that premise maybe there really is only one, universal Rock on Earth, perhaps in the entire universe.
If it is two, then if you continue to divide it, when does it stop being a rock? At the molecular level? Atomic? When? And with that idea still in mind, if you are to merge two rocks together, does it become one? Or is it still two? Theoretically, if it were possible to merge all forms of rock on the planet into one solid mass, is it many rocks still? Or one?
I could go round and round on this premise, but I'm sure you get the picture.
My Conclusion(s): Everything, all matter, is infinitely divisible. Discuss.