CHAPTER 10
Spatial understanding of time. Four-dimensional angles and curves in our life. Does
motion exist in the world or not? Mechanical motion and 'life'. Biological phenomena
as manifestations of motion proceeding in higher space. Evolution of space-sense.
Growth of space-sense and diminution of time-sense. Translation of time-sense into
space-sense. Handicaps presented by our concepts, our language. The need to find a
method of expressing time-concepts spatially. Science on the fourth dimension. A
four-dimensional body. Four-dimensional sphere.
On the basis of all
the conclusions made, we must now try to determine how
we may see the real four-dimensional world which is screened off from us by
the illusory three-dimensional world. There are two methods by which we
may 'see' it: either by direct sensation, with the development of 'space-sense'
and other higher faculties
of which we shall speak later, or by a mental
understanding arrived at by an elucidation of its possible properties by means
of reasoning.
Earlier, by abstract reasoning, we came to the conclusion that the fourth
dimension
of space
must
lie in time, i.e. that time is the fourth dimension of
space. Now we have found psychological proofs of this proposition. By
comparing the perception of the world by different orders of living beings - a
snail, a dog and a man - we have seen how different the properties of
one and
the same world
are for them -precisely those properties
which are expressed
for us in the concepts of time and space. We have seen that they must sense
time and space differently. That which is
time
for a lower being (a snail),
becomes
space
for a being one degree higher (a dog); and the
time of
that
being becomes
space
for a higher degree of being - a man.
This confirms the previously advanced supposition that our idea of time is
essentially
composite
and actually contains
two ideas -
the
idea of a certain
space and the idea of movement in that space. Or, to be more exact - contact
with a certain space, of which we are but dimly aware, provokes in us the
sensation of movement in that space, and all taken together, i.e.
the dim
awareness of a certain space and the sensation of movement in that space, we
call time.
This latter supports the thought that, instead of the idea of time having
arisen from the observation of motion existing in nature, the
actual sensation of motion and the idea of motion have arisen from the 'time-sense' we
possess, which is nothing but an imperfect
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