If you take a baseball, and have it start ten feet from a wall, and continually move half the distance to the wall every five seconds, you'd think that it would never reach the wall... but what about when the radius of the baseball is bigger than the distance to the wall?
Nuclei (of atoms) are infinitely divisible... but nothing could ever infinitely cut them. Eventually, the size of the blade (which would be finite) would be way to big to cut the atom. So we would never see an infinite division.
What if people really don't have enough in common with their perceptions about reality (what is reality, anyway, but some projection of our consciousness? And what is consciousness but some bizarre way of making matter into nothing?) to have anything universal? An inch, a pound? What if our experiences really are too unique to possibly share anything in common? Are we living a lie? Is it possible for us to ever share an identical experience?
If the universe is expanding, what is it expanding into?
How can an electron (or any atomic/subatomic particle) be in two places at once? How can it collide with itself? At what point, what size, to quantum mechanics stop applying? Is it an abrupt termination of those laws, or gradual?
Are we all made of vacuums, considering that is mostly what atoms are made of?
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