If and when scientists find the Higgs boson particle, shouldn't they then also...

pachomius2000

New member
...smash it up for its composition?
Number one on many scientists' 2011 to-do list is to find the Higgs boson — a particle so important to science that it's been dubbed the "God particle."
This fundamental particle, thought to give mass to all particles, has been theorized since 1964, but never detected. That, however, could soon change.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40863045/ns/technology_and_science-science/
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So, is that then the last particle and they have finally known everything that makes up the observable universe?

Or they will smash it up also in order to find out its composition, and continue on and on smashing more and more sub sub atomic particles of sub atomic particles?

Don't they finally have to already face the question to whom the observable universe ultimately owes its beginning or origin at the Big Bang point?

For since it has a beginning, it could not have owed to itself its origin.
 
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