Perspective of 3-dimensional objects from the 4th dimension

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of visualizing higher dimensions using dimensional analogies. It explores the idea of a 2-dimensional being being gifted 2-dimensional sight to see the entirety of a square, and a 3-dimensional being being gifted 3-dimensional sight to see the entirety of a cube. The question then asks what the views would look like if a 3-dimensional being were to view a 3-dimensional cube from the fourth dimension. The conversation also mentions a book called "Experiments in Four Dimensions" which guides readers through exercises to visualize 4D, and references other authors who have also described methods of visualizing higher dimensions. It also mentions Charles Howard Hinton, who claimed to have a method for visualizing
  • #1
wolfpax50
20
0
This question will probably make the most sense to those who have read Edwin Abbott Abbott's novel Flatland. But I'm sure many others know the answer.

To explain, I'll have to use some dimensional analogy.

Let's say you're a 2-dimensional being. You live in a two dimensional world and thus you are limited to 1-dimensional sight. If you were, for example, to look at the flat side of a square, and I was to draw your field of vision, it would be a line. Just as, if a 3-dimensional being (like a human) being were to look at the flat side of a cube, and I was to draw its field of vision, it would be a square.

Now if you, as a lowly 2-dimensional being, were to be gifted the power of 2-dimensional sight (like a human), and were lifted upward and rotated, you could see the square you had been looking at from above. Now, rather than just seeing a side, you would be seeing the entirety of the square at once. If I was to draw your field of vision, it would be square.

Now let's say you're a 3-dimensional being (like a human). As I stated prior, if you were to look at the flat side of a cube, and I was to draw your field of vision, it would be a square. Now if you, the 3-dimensional being, were to be gifted 3-dimensional sight (as the 2-dimensional being was gifted 2-dimensional sight) and were lifted into the fourth dimension and rotated, you could see the cube you had been looking at from a new direction. Now, rather than just seeing a square, you would be seeing the entirety of the cube at once. If I was to draw your field of vision, it would be cube.

Now that that's over with, here is my question. If I were to draw your field of view as a 3-dimensional being, staring at the corner (not the side) of a solid cube, and were to draw successive views as your view is lifted and rotated across the fourth dimension. What would these views look like? At the end would the cube still be solid? What about halfway through the transformation?

If the first view is of a 2-dimensional representation of a 3-dimensional cube and the last view is of a 3-dimensional representation a 3-dimensional cube, and I were to draw all of this on 2-dimensional paper, did anything change? Is it possible to represent this change?

My head hurts.

Any input is appreciated. Please include pictures if possible.
 
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  • #2
This book
http://www.bestwebbuys.com/Experiments-in-Four-Dimensions-ISBN-9780830615414?isrc=b-search
is a series of exercises that the author really wants you to actually do, step by step. You can do them on paper, with the aid of a calculator or with a computer. He walks you carefully through 1D, 2D, 3D and finally, with the understanding and practice you have gained if you really did all the exercises, 4D. This sounds very much like what you are thinking of. But it has been many years since I last opened that and I don't remember the details.

There are other authors, particular in topology, who have described methods of visualizing 4D in various ways. I believe Steenrod has a chapter or section in one of his books on a method to do this.

A century or more ago, in the victorian tradition Charles Howard Hinton created and sold a little pamphlet with a set of colored cubes. He claimed that by carefully following his directions and doing the exercises you could learn to visualize 4D. Some who saw him wrote that he must either really be able to do this or he had just become extremely good at solving questions in 4D. But it is said that he had an incredible memory. He supposedly produced an even larger set of colored cubes later, but I am not sure if those were ever sold. I read somewhere that Rudy Rucker was able to reproduce the smaller set of cubes, but I have never found the details or been able to see the original directions from Hinton. A very very long time ago I did read reprints of several of Hinton's textbooks on 4D and you might be able to find a university library that has those buried in storage somewhere.
 

Related to Perspective of 3-dimensional objects from the 4th dimension

1. What is the fourth dimension?

The fourth dimension is a theoretical concept in mathematics and physics that refers to a dimension beyond the three dimensions of length, width, and height.

2. How can we visualize 3-dimensional objects from the 4th dimension?

One way to visualize 3-dimensional objects from the 4th dimension is through mathematical models and computer simulations. Another approach is through analogies, such as imagining a 3-dimensional cube projected onto a 2-dimensional surface.

3. Can humans perceive objects in the 4th dimension?

No, humans are limited to perceiving objects in three dimensions. Our brains are not wired to process information from a fourth spatial dimension.

4. How does the concept of the 4th dimension relate to time?

In Einstein's theory of relativity, time is considered the fourth dimension. This means that time and space are interconnected and can be thought of as a single entity, called spacetime.

5. What are some real-life applications of understanding the 4th dimension?

Understanding the 4th dimension has practical applications in fields such as mathematics, physics, and computer science. It can also help us better understand concepts such as gravity, relativity, and the behavior of particles in quantum mechanics.

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