Why does the world feel solid if matter is almost entirely empty space? This episode unpacks the paradox using Rutherford’s gold foil experiment, which revealed that atoms are mostly void with mass concentrated in a tiny nucleus.
The sensation of touch, however, arises not from direct contact but from quantum constraints like the Pauli Exclusion Principle and electromagnetic repulsion between electron clouds.
What we perceive as solidity is actually the brain’s interpretation of invisible forces—exposing a deep gap between human experience and the true structure of reality.
Thank you for listening to The Final Unknown Podcast, where science meets the unknown—exploring physics, astronomy, philosophy, and ideas that reshape how you see reality.
This episode includes AI-generated content.