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The dimension of an object is a topological measure of the size of its covering properties. Roughly speaking, it is the number of coordinates needed to specify a point on the object. For example, a rectangle is two-dimensional, while a cube is three-dimensional. The dimension of an object is sometimes also called its "dimensionality."
Originally posted by MichiganSwampBuck
That would mean that nothing can exist without existing in all the dimensions.
[edit on 23-8-2010 by MichiganSwampBuck]
Let's imagine we live in a two-dimensional world for a second. It's a flat plane, right? So, take that flat plane and curl it so that one edge of the plane attaches to the other edge. This is what is called a curled dimension, and as you move along that dimension, you'll eventually go around a full circle and end up where you started.
Originally posted by onequestion
reply to post by MichiganSwampBuck
GREAT post, i was just actually having this discussion in another thread and was not able to word it as well as you.
Agreed and thank you.
There is no limit to the amount of dimensions that can exist because there is no such thing as numbers. Unless of course your a mathematician or you want to argue about the symantics of applied math when building a house or counting money.edit on 9-6-2011 by onequestion because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by MichiganSwampBuck
Originally posted by onequestion
reply to post by MichiganSwampBuck
GREAT post, i was just actually having this discussion in another thread and was not able to word it as well as you.
Agreed and thank you.
There is no limit to the amount of dimensions that can exist because there is no such thing as numbers. Unless of course your a mathematician or you want to argue about the symantics of applied math when building a house or counting money.edit on 9-6-2011 by onequestion because: (no reason given)
A little off course, but we are dealing in abstracts. Concerning numbers and math as abstract concepts, they only exist in our minds. You can show me a symbol that represents a number, but you can't show me the actual number. The Ancient Greeks thought that numbers existed in some other plane of existence.
I'm pretty sure a real object needs four dimensions to exist, but I believe that all other dimensions must be there too. Therefore nothing can slip back and forth between dimensions because it is already in all of them.
Originally posted by polit
A point, line and plane do not exist. They are mathematical concepts.
No experiment has ever demonstrated that there exists more than the three spatial dimensions we are all aware of.
We do not exist within four dimensions. Time =/= a dimension.
Generalizing time as a dimension is an easy way to plot changes mathematically, but it doesn't turn it into the 4th spatial dimension.
When it comes to more than three dimensions we begin to run into some problems. For one, the three dimensions that we perceive all intersect at right angles. Can the same be said for dimension 4+?
I like the explanation of the curled dimensions above.
Originally posted by Nyte Angel
reply to post by MichiganSwampBuck
Seeing as you have looked at this from multiple perspectives, can you please explain to me what makes you so sure that these dimensions actually exist? I'm not saying that I don't believe in them but who's to say that extra dimensions actually exist? Do we have any PROOF that they're extra dimensions? Sorry for being so inquisitive I would just like to know as much as I can about these extra dimensions.
Originally posted by MichiganSwampBuck
Originally posted by polit
I am probably wrong here, but isn't duration a quality of space and isn't dimension simply another word for a quality something has. Like in this sentence, "Her talent adds an extra dimension to her exceptional good looks and wonderful personality." Gravity or magnetism could be an extra "dimension" in this sense, rather than a "force". When using the tech jargon of physics, this is just a semantic difference I suppose.