“What are Fermions made of?”
Hi Aaron, thanks for joining the group and for your question. I hope the fact that you are asking such a question indicates you don’t necessarily buy what’s contained in the Wikipedia entry on fermions.
The answer is very simple: any and all matter necessarily consists of the two fundamental charges only, namely the electron and the positron. In other words, there’s only one type of “fermion” — electron and positron — the rest are all composite particles, ie no quarks whatsoever.
The classification of fermions and bosons is wrong, revealing lack of understanding of the nature of matter. The only valid classification is that of matter and radiation. For matter, only electrons and positrons exist; for radiation, only photons and photinos exist, no gluons whatsoever, and the neutrino is a misnomer — its real identity is photino.
The logical explanation can be expressed as the “ontological exclusion principle” — something today’s physicists have never heard of. We can discuss this further in follow up chats. Thanks again!
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Xiang He
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“What are Fermions made of?”
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