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Space is nothing yet infinitely dense with energy.
A long time ago, atoms were nothing (we didn't know they existed because we couldn't detect them) but now they are something (we know they exist because we can detect them).
you could equally well say that there is nothing between every atom in that single, solid something; but does that really help?
I'd like to point out that physicists don't make attempts to define things like "nothing." It serves no useful purpose.
Quote from: PmbI'd like to point out that physicists don't make attempts to define things like "nothing." It serves no useful purpose.An interesting comment, Pete. Apart, perhaps, from "infinity" what else is "like" nothing?If defining nothing serves no useful purpose, why is it so commonly used, especially in popular science?
Nothing is it's own definition. It means you are wasting your time looking for or trying to define nothing. By definition, nothing is exactly that, nothing.The problem is you are asking the wrong question based on your probably correct assumption that there is something there but at the same time your incorrect assumption that it's called nothing when it should be called "something else unknown". Just calling the unknown and/or undefined "nothing" has confused you and apparently many others too.