CHARGE:
Yes, the electron has a charge of minus one or in other words a negative charge
of one unit. However, in order for charge to be meaningful, it has to be acting
with or against another charge of which there is none. So, does our Lone
Electron have charge in this context or doesn't it?
COLOUR:
An electron is colourless. In any event you need photons, electromagnetic
energy, light waves, to transmit (wavelength and frequency) what we (our
brains) interpret as colour. Our drab, bland, colourless Lone Electron has no
photons to transmit any information about itself, and there are no eyeballs and
brains to interpret that information in any event.
ELECTROMAGNETISM:
The electron is most associated with electromagnetism and the electromagnetic
force. The associated force particle is the photon and electrons can absorb and
emit photons (absorb and emit energy). However, in this scenario, there are no
photons, so therefore there is no electromagnetic force. In any event, a force
is only a meaningful concept if there are two of more particles involved,
since, if you are the sum total of things, you can't give off or receive a
force.
ENTROPY:
Entropy is a statistical concept where over time, left to themselves, things
tend to go from an ordered state to a disordered state, like before-and-after
pictures of a wild party. One electron does not make for statistical analysis,
so the electron's state of order or disorder is what it is. It doesn't increase
nor decrease. In fact it's rather meaningless to philosophize over it.
EQUILIBRIUM:
The Lone Electron is in a state of equilibrium with respect to its
surroundings. It could hardly be otherwise since there are no other
surroundings except nothingness.
EXISTENCE:
Yes, it would be incorrect to say our Lone Electron didn't exist. However,
there's nothing else around it to verify that existence or give any meaning to
it.
GRAVITY:
Since the electron has mass, it must have gravity. However, gravity only has
real meaning between two (or more) objects with mass, like the Earth - Moon -
Sun trilogy; or, in the most traditional of traditional scenarios, the Earth -
falling apple scenario that, according to mythology, inspired Isaac Newton. So,
in the Lone Electron scenario, it's pretty meaningless to talk about gravity.
In fact it might be meaningless to talk about gravity since gravity is
equivalent to acceleration as shown by Einstein. Acceleration implies motion or
velocity which in the context of a one electron universe is meaningless.
Further, the (hypothetical) particle associated with gravity, the graviton,
would be conspicuous by its absence in this Lone Electron thought experiment.
MASS:
Yes, the electron has mass. However, it's yet another particle, known as the
Higgs Boson that gives particles with mass, their mass. The Lone Electron has
no Higgs Bosons around to give it muscle.
MOMENTUM:
None. The same argument applies as with velocity.
PHASE:
There is no phase. One electron does not a solid, liquid, gas or plasma make.
An electron, all by its little lonesome, cannot undergo any phase change, like
say from a liquid to a solid.
SENSE
OF IDENTITY: Our Lone Electron doesn't have a sense of self-awareness since it
isn't conscious and in any event it has nothing else around it to provide a
contrast to itself.
SPACE:
Since the Lone Electron exists in this universe, it has to exist in some sort
of realm, a concept we call space. However, space is not a thing, and the
electron is, so while the two share a common existence, its all apples and
oranges.
SPIN:
Our electron will either be spin-up or spin-down. However, orientation, as with
velocity, is always with respect to something else. If you removed all of the
rest of the Universe (stars, planets, constellations, the Sun, etc.) just leaving
the Earth, well the labels North and South Pole become meaningless. There no
longer is anything that's up or down or sideways that one can orient the
Earth's axis to. We know north because that's where the North Star is located.
No North Star. We know south because the Southern Cross is overhead. No
Southern Cross. A compass isn't any help because it's only an arbitrary
convention what we call north and south and in any event the compass is an
example of that 'something else'.
STRONG
NUCLEAR FORCE: The strong nuclear force only applies in keeping an atomic
nucleus together. Protons, with a positive charge, would like to repel each
other. That they are held in check - confined to quarters - is due to the
strong nuclear force. There is no atomic nucleus in a one electron universe,
therefore there's no strong nuclear force.
TIME:
An electron is a fundamental particle, a basic building block. It doesn't
change any spots and there's nothing else around to cause the electron's spots
to change or to 'witness' change. No change means the concept of time is
meaningless, so therefore, no time unit need apply here for a job.
VELOCITY:
No, the concept of velocity is meaningless in this context. Velocity only has
meaning when measured relative or compared to something else. If you drive
along at sixty miles per hour, that's relative to the landscape you are driving
past, like the surface of the road. The Lone Electron has no landscape for its
velocity to be measured against.
WEAK
NUCLEAR FORCE: The weak nuclear force governs radioactivity, or the decay of
unstable atomic nuclei into more stable forms. One type of radioactivity (Beta
decay) can emit an electron, but in the absence of any nuclei, unstable or
otherwise, our Lone Electron has no connection with the weak nuclear force
since in this, our electron's universe, there ain't no such critter.
So
we see how much more meaningful it is to have more than one item per universe.
Fortunately, our Universe satisfies that criteria. But the real interesting
bit, at least from a philosopher's point of view, is how some of our most
take-it-for-granted concepts that form our worldview, disappear or have no
meaning when applied to just one entity. It's impossible for us to imagine a
worldview without there being time, the arrow of time (past, present, and
future) or entropy. It's impossible for us to imagine a worldview without mass
or gravity. It's impossible for us to imagine a worldview without motion. Yet
it is entirely possible to imagine a Lone Electron universe where exactly that
worldview has to apply!
For
more information click here - Commercial
Electrical Contractor
No comments:
Post a Comment