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by Osmium
3963 days ago
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The trouble with fundamental forces is that they're fundamental. Trying to explain them in terms of something else is ultimately misleading (even though this can work with literally almost everything else). So I'm sympathetic to that specific question. |
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That can get you a fair distance in describing gravity (it's like the attract example, but much weaker) and the strong nuclear force (very strong attraction, but very very short range). That can then allow you to describe atoms, electrons and the protons in the nucleus attract each other, but [waves hands] not to the point they collapse into each other. And the nucleus, strong force generally overpowers the repulsion of protons.
And at this point a quantum mechanics for poets for chemistry works fairly well, it's not like any of that stuff makes intuitive sense anyway.
This doesn't contradict Feynman, of course, I can't say that I ever really understood magnetism, and I've also left the weak force out, but as I understand it you can wave your hands there and say it mediates beta decay. But the above does help you describe and understand the fundamentals of a lot of the universe, and much of what's important to you. Add Newtonian mechanics, which is pretty intuitive since we live in that world, and you're in fairly good shape. For that matter, a fair amount of special relativity can be easily added, the very basics of motion and the new definitions needed.