Originally posted by 37818
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What you read was that I was claiming what was written there was true. I never said that. I never professed faith in the information. I was careful to qualify what I said to avoid professed faith in the information, a habit I adopted whilst studying for a PhD. in science, by the way. If you read scientific papers you will find the language is nearly always qualified ("it seems like that..." or whatever). If you read my comment to Sparko (which I see you pretty much repeated), you will see that I start "I think that..." in the same way.
My guess is that the Wiki page is right, and particles like the photon are their own anti-matter. It fits with what else I know about science, but it is not my area of expertise, and this would seem to disagree with the claim in the Scientific American. I was hoping my post might prompt someone more knowledgeable in physics to explain the discrepancy.
I would love to hear how you get from "Electric fields have magnetic fields and magnetic fields have electric fields" to determining that photons are their own anti-matter. Do please elaborate.
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