SpaceNerdz said:
Similarly, I'm trying to understand what a charge is physically ( not philosophically -- I can't stand philosophy ), and to say that a charge is a fundamental property of matter, or that it has a positive and a negative, doesn't actually explain what a charge is.
My two cents:
Consider that two particles will either attract or repel each other, with the strength of this attraction of repulsion varying with the distance between the charges. What causes this to happen? The simplest answer is that each particle possesses a property we have labeled "charge". But what is charge? We
define it to be the cause of the interaction between two "charged" particles.
Note that what we've done is we've taken an observation, that two particles will attract or repel each other, and come up with an explanation for it. We say, "The particles interact
because they are charged". This isn't a philosophical answer, this is how science works and how we've figure out how the universe works so far, by creating explanations for our observations that enable us to make testable predictions. There is no "what is charge
really". The full extent of what charge is lies in a simple definition combined with the mathematical rules governing how it works.
You can get as detailed as you'd like in describing
how it works, you can bring in the electromagnetic field, photons, virtual particles, and anything else you want, you can even write books and articles translating the math into a language that the layman can understand, but in the end it comes down to a simple definition:
Electric charge is the property of matter that causes it to experience a force in the presence of an electric field.
It's really as simple as that. ;)