The distinction between contact forces and field forces is not as sharp as you may
have been led to believe by the previous discussion. When examined at the atomic
level, all the forces we classify as contact forces turn out to be caused by electric
(field) forces of the type illustrated in Figure 5.1e. Nevertheless, in developing models
for macroscopic phenomena, it is convenient to use both classifications of forces.
The only known fundamental forces in nature are all field forces: (1) gravitational
forces between objects, (2) electromagnetic forces between electric charges, (3) strong
forces between subatomic particles, and (4) weak forces that arise in certain radioactive
decay processes. In classical physics, we are concerned only with gravitational and
electromagnetic forces. We will discuss strong and weak forces in Chapter 46.