Alternately, it might create exotic bits of altered matter, called strangelets, that would obliterate
whatever ordinary matter they met.
Not exact matches
So Whitehead's reply to Berkeley is, in effect, that
matter really does
matter in the
ordinary sense of the word, since
whatever acquires material existence is always capable of influencing by means of signs the becomings of subsequent «things.»
Dark
matter,
whatever it is, exerts a gravitational pull but only interacts with
ordinary matter very weakly, if at all, beyond that.