Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Imagining the tenth dimension


            The first four dimensions explained by Rob Bryanton are well known and understand by many people. The nature of the world is three-dimensional, and the fourth dimension is time. In understanding the ten dimensions, it involves taking the imagination on one level at time in order to arrive at a construct much larger than on may imagine at once.

            The first dimension starts at a point that has no size and dimension. A point is just an imaginary idea that shows the position in the system. Combining two points gives a line that becomes the first dimension. The second dimension starts by plotting a line and then drawing another line that branches off from the first. It forms a split that gives a two-dimensional object. Two-dimensional objects have both a length and a width. An example of a creature having two dimensions would be a “Flatlander.” The explanation of the third dimension is as a fold formed by having an object with a length, width, and height. The three dimensions create a “space land” and many of the things in the world have three dimensions as visualized by people. The fourth dimension derives its explanation from the idea that one can move upwards and downwards or forward and backward within a square. It creates a sense of time where one can move in any direction with reference to time and thereby creating two dimensions. Time is a line that joins two points that are indeterminate in size.
            The fifth dimension arises from imagining that there is a long undulating snake moving in a straight path. It has many paths to branch to at any given moment, hence the fifth dimension which is a split. The sixth dimension is a fold derived from the analogy of a Mobius strip. He views time as a two-dimensional strip of paper. The seventh dimension is a line that treats all other dimensions as a point. The eighth dimension is a split, the ninth one a fold and lastly the tenth as a point. The three derive explanations from the idea of infinity and build upon one another.

Work cited
Imagining the Tenth Dimension (annotated) by Rob Bryanton

Carolyn Morgan is the author of this paper. A senior editor at MeldaResearch.Com in custom research paper services. If you need a similar paper you can place your order from urgent essay writing service.

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