davevoce wrote:Hi All
I'm new to this forum but certainly not new to the EU.
One thought I've had for quite a while is...
Imagine a point of space, a speck of nothingness in the great void of space. Countless photons, x-rays and other things are constantly passing through this tiny speck off on their journey to somewhere else.
So why don't they all just bump into each other? How do they pass through without being there? And how do they pass through? Is a physical thing passed or just the 'information'?
Does the EU have any thoughts on this. I'd very much appreciate any comments. Sorry if this in the wrong section or its just a stupid question.

Hi davevoce, I can't speak for EU, i'm still learning with a long way to go and much too much reading to do but . . .
I imagine 'space' as an infinitely dense aether, with properties a little like air inasmuch as sound and light pass through any point almost without any mutual interference, but think only of the sound waves which given our atmospheres ephemeral nature have a very specific speed of transmission which is quite slow; it also has properties like water which being denser has a greater speed of transmission of both sound and pressure waves, again with minimal interference, so the aether/space is the far extension of these like a transparent superfluid superconducting version of mercury and the x-rays/photons are the result of powerful im/explosions, completely suppressed by the infinite density of the aether, propogating through the medium as pressure waves, only reacting with the hollow bubbles of 'matter' in space/the aether, though probably forming interference patterns on some scale just as sound would in air or water. The clue to the density is the specific speed of light through it were it truly empty there would be variability, and for other 'forces' that may well be the case, now think of light through air.