Jump to content

Ali Zufer

Members
  • Posts

    5
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

Ali Zufer's Achievements

Lepton

Lepton (1/13)

0

Reputation

  1. Who knows... In all seriousness though, if the theories that introduce concepts of higher dimensions are true, that is the only logical answer.
  2. Looking at is like this it actually makes sense. However it doesn't deviate much from the other point I had, which is that every object still can exist in higher dimensions than we can see. There's nothing to say that the computer I'm currently writing in is not say 10-dimensional, but my fingers are also 10-dimensional so I don't actually see or sense any difference. Actually I'd argue that you still do move your head in 4, 5 or even 10 dimensions. You just cannot sense it since you don't have the brain capacity to do that.
  3. That makes sense, however if I only saw and perceived two dimensions, I wouldn't be able to feel an object in the way that I do now would I? We cannot directly see all of a 3-dimensional objects sides at the same time, you're completely right at that point. But we can indeed understand the concept of the third dimension height, together with the two remaining dimensions. In theory that means that we're still able to see 3-dimensionally. Think of it this way: You can move your eyes up, to the side and at the same time you can move your head forwards and backwards giving you depth. That's all three dimensions covered there. Which makes my previous point apply. At least that's my take on it. Oh but there's still a difference. Since a dimension means and refers to a spatial one, time cannot be defined as a dimension even in the way that you propose. Sure you use it as a coordinate when referring to a point. But you cannot move within it at will, you're just bound to it by it's constant passing. You can and do however, still move in more dimensions than you can see according to my thesis. But since you can't see them there's no reason to give a coordinate to it. Would you however see 4 dimensions instead of three, then the 4th dimension should be needed to give an accurate coordinate, just to get to the physical space. Which you can still do without a time coordinate.
  4. No, you didn't quite understand what I meant. Take a square. It is 2-dimensional, but to be able to see that you have to look from above, which is a 3rd dimension You cannot see 2 dimensions using just 2 dimensions alone. The third is needed. The same way, to be able to see the third dimension means that you're actually looking at it from outside of the third dimension, hence the 4th dimension. No, time is not a spatial dimension as has been stated multiple times. A dimension occupies space, time does not. Time has no place in a discussion about space. As for the other thing, you only specify 3 because you only can see three. You're still actually moving in more dimensions, you just can't see it.
  5. We all are familiar with the theories of the universe being higher dimensional I assume. There has never been any proof of this, bit I'm going to go ahead and add another probability level to them being true by explaining them with simple logic. But first, I'm gonna 'prove' something else which leads to this point. Let's start with the 3 dimensions we know of. Width, height and depth. We are able to see all of these dimensions, and that has led people to assume that this world is 3-dimensional, and we living here also are 3-dimensional. And this is a valid assumption... except that it logically doesn't make sense. Why? Well let me explain. When looking at a 2-dimensional square (although nothing in this world is truly 2-dimensional, and remember this for later). What we see are the two dimensions, the width and depth of said square. However, keep in mind where we're looking at it from! That's right. Our viewpoint is actually the third dimension, height! What does this say? Well for one to be able to discern that what they're truly looking at is 2-dimensional, one must see it from the 3rd dimension. Otherwise, without the third dimension all you'd see are one-dimensional lines, since you cannot look at it from above. And that brings me to us humans. We see the world as 3-dimensional. We can discern height and width, as well as height. But to be able to see height we must technically be looking at a dimension that's outside of height no? Let's compare it to something else: You're in a car. Your viewpoint is from the car, but what you see is not the car but a bike outside your windscreen. You then conclude that the car doesn't exist, since you can't see it. But what you actually do is to see from it. To actually see the car you'd have to go inside of a truck. You'd the conclude that the car is the highest form, but you're actually looking at it from a higher form, the truck. And this goes on and on. Dimensions work the same way. The reason why we can't see the 4th dimension itself is because we're seeing from it, and to see the 4th dimension as we see the third would require you to exist on the 5th dimension. However the 4th dimension has to exist, because we're actually seeing everything from it. Which means that we humans never were 3-dimensional beings, but have always been 4-dimensional. And now I come back to what I briefly mentioned, the point that something 2d cannot exist in a 3d world. If you look around you what you see are just 3d objects. You might argue that a paper is 2-dimensional, but it still has a tiny bit of height. Nothing can truly be 2-dimensional. This proves that were the world to consist of several more dimensions than we see, it still wouldn't matter since we actually interact with them daily. In other words, every object, including your own body has more dimensions than 3. They might just as well have infinite dimensions, and it wouldn't matter one bit. You can only see 3 of them because your brain is not advanced enough to handle more, which then made you gain eyes being able only to discern 3 dimensions during the evolutionary stages. An ant for example can only see two, because of evolving eyes that only can see two thanks to it's brain capacity. but it still sees everything from the 3rd dimension, making it a 3-dimensional being. In short the physical mass is not what determines what dimension a being exists in, since that could be infinite as stated earlier, but it's the mental capacity of said being. Which means that were a 'higher dimensional being' interact with us it wouldn't be infinite times powerful as people state, but would instead just have a wider perspective on the world. That being said, this is just a thesis and will probably never be more. Thanks for reading, and feedback would be appriciated.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.