Diamond Enthusiast

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As interesting as those are, they are both true of any matter, from quarks to galaxies. They are just easier to notice with small objects like quarks, electrons, protons, neutrons, and the like.
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Site Administrator

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"...an electron does not appear to exist until someone observes it."
I don't understand this, unless the meaning is the same as with many things; i.e. unknown things don't "exist" until they are known. (It was a fact that Pluto didn't exist until it was discovered; then it did. Mules couldn't reproduce; and then one did.) If, in the general usage of the words, electrons don't exist until they are observed, them, for 99% of human history, they didn't exist. Is that true? Is that possible? If not, why not?
If the quoted statement is true, obviously, I am missing something. What don't I understand?
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| Posts: 17286 | Location: Lincoln Place, Granite City, IL, USA | Registered: 06-03-02 |    |
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