Norfleet said:
Hardness is a property of how much is required to scratch, bend, warp, or otherwise mar it. A wall of force therefore has infinite hardness, since it's indestructible and nothing can scratch, chip, or otherwise damage it.
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Sharpness isn't really a property of the wall of force itself, but is simply how thin the edge of an object is: A wall of force is a 2-dimensional object, and as such, having no width, possesses infinite sharpness.
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I would think it would be hard to hang on a wall of force, since Walls of Force are vertical. Let's say for the sake of argument that some force, perhaps decompression, provides you with a force that causes you to fall in a nonvertical direction. If you simply hang from the edge of that wall of force, nothing inherently happens to your fingers, until they happen to slide inwards on the plane.
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The wall of force is, of course, impenetrable, and 2-dimensional, so your fingers slide downwards without penetrating, since the wall has no third dimension of thickness to stop your fingers from doing this. Unfortunately, the effect is that the grasping part of your fingers now happens to be on the opposite side of the wall of force from the rest of you.
Ut feugiat arcu eu ligula. Donec nibh magna, volutpat nec, imperdiet nec, viverra congue, lorem. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Fusce vestibulum vulputate sem. Maecenas id augue eget est pharetra viverra. Nam dapibus mollis enim. Integer viverra sapien ac mi. Cras at urna quis ligula nonummy fringilla. Nullam odio est, dictum et, aliquam sed, imperdiet eget, nibh. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae;
Walls of Force are impenetrable to other forces and objects, such as your fingers' attempt to stop you from being pulled off by the other force which necessitated the clinging. Therefore, you fall under the influence of that other force....but walls of force are impenetrable. Your fingers, on the opposite side of the wall, cannot be pulled along with you, because that would necessitate it passing through the wall of force. So they stay there, and your fingers are thus cut off.
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It's immovable. It's impenetrable, which means it's infinitely strong, because if it were not infinitely strong, then a finite force would be able to penetrate it, thereby meaning it's not impenetrable.
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It's infinitely hard, because it's completely immovable in all parts, and therefore perfectly rigid and cannot be bent, scratched, or chipped by anything. It's an immovable, impenetrable plane. Impenetrable planes, of course, happen to be the exact description of a perfect razor.
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Actually, in a collision where you just stop moving, what you have is the ideal inelastic collision with an immobile object of effectively infinite mass. Your kinetic energy can't be transferred to the object at all, and as a result, this kinetic energy becomes painfully converted into damage to you. It's very much like splatting into the Earth, only without the Earth moving a little bit.
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Still, the splatting has to be conserved somehow, and therefore becomes that much more damage to you. Unless you're suggesting that somebody falling onto a wall of force as a result of gravity alteration or being hurled incurs absolutely no damage.
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Alternative interpretations offered include that the wall of force dispels when this happens, because it is no longer unbroken....except that walls of force are impenetrable, and such a thing would violate the impenetrability. Yet, as planes, they're also two-dimensional, so offer no resistance to vertical motion into the edge.
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Or whatever.