Eelco said:
When you say they are the quantized particles of the weak field, you mean we can treat them analogous to photons (quantized paritcles of the electric field), for instance. I would agree this gives some intuitive sense to considering them as force carriers.
One of the crowning achievements of twentieth century particle physics was the discovery of a unified "electroweak" interaction. Weak and electric interactions are different aspects of this unified electroweak interaction. So the W and Z bosons are not just
analogous to the photon, they are (orthogonal components of) the same "thing".
The fact that the W and Z are massive, while the photon is not, means that the full symmetry of this electroweak interaction is somehow "hidden". The generic way this happens was figured out in the 1960s; discovering the specifics of what actually occurs in nature is the primary goal of the LHC.
Eelco said:
Are you saying in your last paragraph that we could treat electrons or neutrinos for instance in the same way, or alternatively, treat photons as matter? That would indeed make the choice rather arbitrary.
Think about what matter is: stuff is made of molecules are made of atoms are made of electrons, protons and neutrons. Electrons, protons and neutrons are all fermions! Of course, it was later discovered that protons and neutrons are composite systems, but this simply introduced another level of fermions in the form of quarks.
Meanwhile, photons are not bound in atoms, but are bouncing around and interacting with everything that has electric charge. The W and Z gauge bosons similarly interact with everything that has weak charge.
To summarize: Matter is made out of fermions, so fermions are sometimes called "matter particles". Gauge bosons interact with all particles that feel the corresponding force, so they're sometimes called "force carriers". Maybe this can be useful to try to describe particle physics without doing any math, but I strongly agree with michael879 that taking these nicknames too seriously can be confusing and misleading.
Eelco said:
So the convention is to draw the line based on spin statistics. But this doesn't seem to make much sense to me, absent strong evidence that the massive bosons are not simply composite particles (such as in the Rishon model), deriving their spin statistics from this fact.
Just to elaborate on what Kevin_Axion hinted at, the fact that matter is made out of fermions
at the level of nucleons and electrons is essential to the existence of life. If these were bosons, then all bosonic-electrons would roll down to the same, lowest-energy atomic orbital, and there would be no chemistry or molecules as we know (and are made out of) them.
The possibility of compositeness at much smaller scales is irrelevant to those considerations. The main question this "Rishon model" (which I hadn't heard of before) raised in my mind was what implications it would have for the unified electroweak interaction. I took a quick look at Harari's 1979 paper (
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/cgi-wrap/getdoc/slac-pub-2310.pdf), and saw that he claims the model maintains spontaneously-broken electroweak gauge invariance. He's the expert on his model, so I'll trust him on this for the time being.
Just for the record, I should mention that experimental searches for this sort of elementary-particle substructure have been going on continuously for decades, finding zilch. To demand strong evidence
against such models could sound a little churlish to some readers, given that there is (to my knowledge) absolutely no experimental evidence
in favor of these proposals.