r/Physics • u/NeedleworkerDeer • 1d ago
Question Do states of matter actually exist?
I don't care how many of them there are or anything, just the idea that states of matter actually exist and take energy to change between.
I always thought matter was just a continuum and we demarcated a point where it was moving a little, a lot, and a whole lot, more or less, and that point (while fairly accurate) was more of a human construct than a state of nature.
But I was reading about how temperature doesn't actually increase in a object during a phase change until it has changed to the next state of matter.
Is there any debate on this or doubts about the existence of states of matter or is it more or less a case closed sort of deal?
Edit: Follow up, since people seem to be saying states of matter are actually thought to exist, how could any physicists not believe in god/higher power if the universe has such an exact ordering of things? It's almost too magical.
Obviously it could just be the way things are, but man is that weird. I always thought the states were more of a Pratchett-esque "fairy stories for children" type of deal.
(I am an atheist, but come on).