Why would circular reasoning lead to that conclusion?Ha, Ha. The reasoning lead down a path to: "they are all made of something else",
Again, this is the science section of the forum. Please post alternative theories and fringe ideas in the appropriate section.I think we need something at the Planck length and this is spacetime.
Sure, introducing unfounded speculation without properly understanding the theory in which it is introduced can lead to having contradictory and circular conclusions. It's a classic sign that the introduced unfounded speculation is wrong.It's down a spiral path due to the "sub" prefix.
Well, merely thinking it isn't enough: you have to proof it.I'm prepared to accept that. But I still think it is spiral or more like a balancing stick, not circular.
If A contains B, and B contains A, is that circular?Lets state this clearly: anti-ud have sub-lepton content and leptons have sub-quark content. Is it circular?
That does not follow; please explain your logic.It depends on if A and B are made of the same substructure or not.
Right, but that's obviously false in this case, because leptons are, per definition, not the same as quarks. I did spot that option, but I thought you'd be honest enough not to use that as an "out". Please stop being intellectually dishonest."A contains B and B contains A" is a true statement if A and B has the same substructure. i.e. A = B.
OK, let's take a look.I edited the reply #91.
A contains B"A contains B and B contains A" is a true statement if A and B has the same substructure. i.e. A_s = B_s. Now substitute B for A.
You do realize that "substitute B for A" is the same as saying B = A?
Great! I'm glad you came to that conclusion too.OK. It is circular.
Irrelevant and off-topic. You admitted your entire idea is fraught with circular reasoning, and thus can be dismissed on that basis.This means: the meaning of "->" is: If A -> B then A can be caused to change into B but A not= F(B) and B not= F(A).
The whole argument doesn't need to be circular for the argument to fail; only a single but critical portion of it being circular is enough.The whole argument can't be circular: I think the following leads to the circle:
"electron + electron antineutrino -> anti-ud so electron and electron antineutrino has sub-quark content."