I am questioning what indivisible means in context. You did not say if you consider a photon indivisible or not, and how that related to pair production.
Mainly because I don't see what that has to do with anything. Pair production has nothing to do with something being divisible. No, I don't consider photons to be divisible because you can't split them up into anything smaller.
The thing is that you can't ever break up something and get quarks. You get other things made of quarks.
Yes you can. That is why I mentioned quark-gluon plasma.
You can isolate the smaller things in all of those other stages. So it would be like breaking up a bunch of humans and getting a rat, a tree and a dog. They are made up of cells as well, but not being able to get the cells themselves.
Why do you have to be able to isolate something to know it is there? If something can be split into smaller things, it is divisible. That's what the word means. The properties of the smaller things are irrelevant.
I am not saying quarks don't exist, it is just that they can never exist by themselves and not as a part of some larger particle.
Again, yes they can.
I tend to lean towards this being evidence that these types of particles are energy and not matter; waves can easily be in two places at once, matter cannot.
Except atoms also follow exactly the same rules. Where do you draw the line between matter and non-matter?
You have wrongly misinterpreted and misquoted me. I never said or implied that “atoms were indivisible”.
Even if the sentence - “An atom is the smallest indivisible unit of matter” was poorly worded, it’s clear from the sentence immediately following - “Anything
subatomic is not matter” that I’m not saying that atoms are indivisible. I don’t think it was that poorly worded however, just poorly interpreted by yourself. I would be surprised if anyone else interpreted my words the way you did (perhaps I should start a poll

.
Atoms are not indivisible. Atoms are not the smallest unit of matter. Whatever you actually meant, that sentence was wrong.
I think it‘s obvious that I was saying that an atom is the smallest size of matter, and (by this definition) if it‘s divided it’s no longer matter. Whether I’m right or wrong about this is irrelevant to you misinterpretation. If I said - “The number 1 is the smallest indivisible integer”, your interpretation would claim that I was saying that the number 1 was indivisible. The sentence (an atom is the smallest indivisible unit of matter) wasn’t even mine. I copied it from one of many pages on the internet that use it.
Yes. If you say that the number one is indivisible I would claim that you were saying the number one is indivisible. In fact, that's a perfect analogy. Not only is the number one not indivisible, it is not the smallest integer.
In any case, the main point I was making wasn't that atoms are not indivisible. It is that
according to your own definition atoms are not the smallest unit of matter. You have changed your position at least twice so far, without ever actually admitting to doing so. First you claimed that photons aren't matter because they don't have mass. Then you claimed that all point-like particles aren't matter because they don't have dimensions. Now you are claiming that anything smaller than an atom isn't matter for no apparent reason. The first two I can cope with. They are utterly pointless definitions, but at least they are self-consistent. You current position is just plain wrong. There are plenty of particles smaller than atoms which have all the same properties of atoms. Without even worrying about subatomic particles, your new definition excludes plasmas. I would have given up arguing this subject long ago, but every time everyone else reaches a consensus you take the nonsense to an even higher level.
If you want to keep misinterpreting and misquoting me that’s your choice. As far as I’m concerned the “matter” is closed.
Misinterpreted, maybe. Misquoted? Either provide some evidence or withdraw that lie.
What I would really appreciate is an answer to my post #98 . . .
Your previous claims:
(#13) “What makes you think light isn't matter?”
(#26) “light is matter”
(#34) “Yes, light is matter. You are wrong"
You then entered this thread with (#34) “It depends on your definition, but in general, yes, light is matter.” I wonder what happened “light is matter. You are wrong”. If “It depends on your definition” why am I “wrong“?
Someone changing their position based on debate with other people? My god, what is the world coming to? Rest assured, however, it was nothing to do with your posts, only those by people who actually show some understanding of what they are talking about.