something past and
something future
may lie together, and on another side,
also together,
something future and
something past.
No less absurd will be
the idea that some phenomena appear from where others disappear and vice
versa. He will persist in thinking that the future is that from which everything
comes and the past is that to which everything goes, and
from which nothing
returns.
The plane being will be incapable of understanding that phenomena
may proceed from the past as well as from the future.
Thus we see that the plane being will have
a very naive view of the
changing colour of the line lying on the surface. The appearance of
different
spokes he will regard as changes in the colour of
one and the same line,
and,
for him, the recurring appearance of a spoke of the same colour will be, each
time, a
new
appearance of the given colour.
Yet, having noticed a certain periodicity in the changes of the colour of the
lines on the surface, having memorized the order
of their appearance and
learned to determine the 'time' of the appearance of certain spokes in relation
to some other more permanent phenomenon, the plane being will be able to
foretell the change of the line from one colour to another.
Then he will say that he
has studied
this phenomenon, i.e. that he can
apply to it the 'mathematical method' - can 'calculate it'.
If we enter
the world of the plane being, he will sense only the lines
bounding the sections of our bodies. These sections, which will be
living
beings
for him, will appear from nowhere, change for no apparent reason,
and disappear somewhere
in a miraculous manner.
The
sections of all our
inanimate but moving objects will also be independent living beings for him.
If the consciousness of a plane being could have the faintest suspicion of
our existence or enter into any kind of communication with our
consciousness, we would be for him higher, omniscient, maybe omnipotent
and, above all,
unknowable beings
of a totally incomprehensible category.
We would see his world
as it is
and not as it appears to him. We would see
the past and the future; we would be able to foretell, direct and even create
events.
We would know the essence of things. We would know what 'matter' (a
straight line) is, what 'motion' (a curve,
an irregular line, an angle) is. We
would see the
angle
and see the
centre.
And this would give us an enormous
advantage over a two-dimensional being.
In all the phenomena of the two-dimensional world we would see
much more than the plane being does, or would see something quite different from
what he sees.
We would be able to tell him many new, unexpected and
striking things about the
phenomena of his world - if he could hear and
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