given by the theosophical writer, C. W. Leadbeater, in one of his books. If we
touch the surface of a table with our
five fingertips of one hand, there will be
then on the surface of the table only five circles, and on
this surface
it is
impossible to have any idea either of the hand or of the man to whom the
hand belongs. There will be five
separate
circles on the table's surface. How,
from these, is
it possible to picture a man, with all the richness of his physical
and psychological life? It is impossible. Our relation to the four-dimensional
world may be exactly the same as the relationship between that consciousness
which sees the five circles on the table and
the man.
We see only 'fingertips';
that is why the fourth dimension is incomprehensible for us.
In
addition, we know that it is possible to draw an image of a three
dimensional body on a plane, that it is possible to draw a cube, a polyhedron,
or a sphere. But it will not be a real cube or a real sphere, but only the
projection of a cube or a sphere on a plane. So it may be that we are justified
in thinking that the three-dimensional bodies
we see in our space are
images,
so to
speak, of four-dimensional bodies, incomprehensible for us.
CHAPTER 4
In what direction may the fourth dimension lie? What is motion? Two kinds of
movement - movement in space and movement in time -contained in every motion.
What is time? Present past and future. Wundt on sense-cognition. Groping through
life. Why we do not see the past and the future. A new extension in space and motion
in that space. Two ideas contained in the concept of time. Time as the fourth
dimension of space. Impossibility of understanding the idea of the fourth dimension
without the idea of motion. The idea of motion and 'time-sense'. 'Time-sense' as the
limit (surface) of space sense. Riemann's idea of the translation of time into space in
the fourth dimension. Hinton on the law of surfaces. 'Ether' as a surface.
From the analogy between the relation of lower dimensional figures to higher
dimensional figures we have established the fact that a
four-dimensional body
may be regarded as the trace of the movement of a three-dimensional body in
a direction not contained in it, i.e. that the direction of motion in the fourth
dimension lies outside all the directions possible in a three-dimensional
space.
What can this direction be?
In order to answer this question we must see whether we know of any
movement in a direction not contained in three-dimensional space.
We know that every movement in space is accompanied by what we may
call
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