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Your hand is on the table right now. You can feel it — solid, real, undeniable. But zoom in far enough and there's a gap. A real, physical gap between you and that surface. And nothing in the universe can close it. In this video, we explore the quantum mechanical reason you've never truly touched anything — drawing from Feynman's explanations of electromagnetic interaction and the Pauli exclusion principle as presented in The Feynman Lectures on Physics and QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter. 🕐 Timestamps 0:00 – Put your hand on a table. Now let me ruin it. 2:15 – Atoms are almost entirely empty space 4:40 – Why doesn't your hand pass right through? 7:10 – The common answer is wrong (or at least incomplete) 9:30 – Pauli's exclusion principle: the universe's strictest rule 12:45 – The quantum gap between you and everything 15:20 – What "touch" really means — and what it doesn't 📚 Sources Richard P. Feynman, Robert B. Leighton, Matthew Sands — The Feynman Lectures on Physics, Volume III, Chapter 4: "Identical Particles" (1965) Richard P. Feynman — QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter, Chapter 3 (1985) Richard P. Feynman — Six Easy Pieces: Essentials of Physics Explained by Its Most Brilliant Teacher, "Atoms in Motion" (1995) Richard P. Feynman — The Character of Physical Law, Chapter 6: "Probability and Uncertainty" (1965) 🎬 Credits Script: AI-generated in the voice of Richard Feynman Narration: Synthetic TTS voice Visuals: AI-generated What's the one everyday sensation that feels the most "real" to you — and how does it change knowing there's always a quantum gap? We'd love to hear your answer. ⚠️ WARNING: [This video is AI-generated (synthetic voice and visuals). It is an original, fictional lecture inspired by Richard Feynman's teaching style and public ideas, and is not an authentic recording, endorsement, or statement by Richard Feynman or his estate. Any resemblance is for educational/creative purposes]