bjacoby said:
You are now saying that the thing that is in the vacuum is a "field".
Exactly. The point is that I agree with you that it is not logically sound to say that "nothing" does "something" like store energy. So since there logically has to be something that is storing the energy what should we call it? In science we call it a "field". No problem, we use weirder names like "quark" and "gamma ray" as well as more common names like "force", so the name isn't important. What is important is its experimental and theoretical properties, which are defined such that a "field" can exert forces on matter and store energy and carry momentum etc.
There is nothing at all that is illogical in any way with that. Nobody is claiming that "nothing" is the cause of "something". And the "something" that is the cause has well defined properties and is given a nice short name which is easy to pronounce and remember.
bjacoby said:
Well that is a bit of a hand wave, since a "field" is an abstract mathematical principle describing a distribution of forces. On the other hand we agree that FORCES are present in the vacuum.
Technically the force is not present in a vacuum. If you look at the Lorentz force equation you see that there must be a charge in order for the force to exist, and charge, in turn, is always attached to matter. So there must be some matter present for the force to exist. However, this is just a minor problem, hardly worth pursuing. The bigger problem is in thinking that fields somehow have a different scientific standing than forces.
bjacoby said:
My original point that nobody has addressed is that that there are real forces in empty space MAPPED by electric and magnetic fields. But so far as I know there is NO model that suggests how these forces arise. To say they arise from the fields is wrong because the field is only an abstraction. ...
Your errors are that you think an abstraction in more real than reality! So if one asserts that a perfect vacuum is indeed "perfect" in the material sense so no material objects exist there, then one must ask how indeed do the all too real forces arise there?
You apparently have the mistaken belief that forces are somehow "more real" than fields. That is simply not the case. They have equal footing both theoretically and experimentally. In every sense that a force is real, a field is also real. In every sense that a field is abstract, a force is also abstract.
All physical concepts have two aspects to them, theoretical and experimental. The theoretical aspect is how a concept is defined in an abstract mathematical framework, and its relationship to other similar theoretical abstractions is expressed in equations. The experimental aspect is how a quantity can be physically measured, or in other words, how you can translate the abstract equations of a theory into predictions for the measured outcome of an experiment. So, a field is abstract in the sense that it has a place in the mathematical framework of physical theories. A force is abstract in the same sense. Similarly, both forces and fields have well-defined processes for measuring them experimentally. They enjoy, in every way, the same scientific standing.