Atoms are galaxies.

I have solved Benzene using the concept:
users.accesscomm.ca/john/BenzeneE.GIF

What this means is there is no smallest- no
reduction in complexity or detail as one
considers smaller and smaller structuring.

Every electron could be the galactic arm of
stars and planets that contains Earth. There
is intelligence teeming in just one part of one electron.
How many electrons are in my body? What
kind of power would I have if all the intelligence
in all of them was of one accord?

The Universe is a fractal- both within us and without us-
but each of us is separate by virtue of being.

john
galaxy model for the atom

I’m not quite sure what you’ve ‘solved’. Is this philosophy, or more suited to the Natural Science board?

Hi
I’ll reply more fully after work, but a brief word now-
if every atom in my body, or at least the Carbon atoms,
were like the Milky Way, discoid in structure and
full of Life, intelligent or otherwise, if there is an otherwise,
does that affect philosophy? Now I am not only steward of my own
fate, but also of all these others’ to some extent, no?
john

OK.
There is no such thing as smallest.
The Universe is a fractal, based on atom/galaxy.
When you get down to an atom’s innards, it isn’t
big Tonka-Toy quarks that are all identical, it’s
the center of a galaxy, surrounded by arms of
millions of stars, planets, asteroids, etc, that make
up each electron. There is no diminution of detail
and complexity as one examines ever more
closely. Rather our examining tool- photons- becomes
too large and unwieldy to resolve that
detail and complexity.
So we deny it.
Planck’s limit.

But there is no limit.
Just smaller photons. A whole smaller
electromagnetic spectrum.
And smaller divisions of matter by a factor
of galaxy over atom. And intelligent life
whose lifetimes are atom over galaxy as long.

Much too short a time to communicate with us.

Or influence us.

Right?

john

That’s a pretty big “if”, no? And it’s an empirical question, to be answered by scientific research.

But given the if - the fate of individual carbon atoms is utterly beyond your control, how can you have any moral responsibility toward them?