One experiences the fourth dimension all the time.

Ideas about how a world with more than three spatial dimensions would work - what laws of physics would be needed, how things would be built, how people would do things and so on.

One experiences the fourth dimension all the time.

Postby jeffrey.sharpe » Sat May 31, 2014 6:58 am

Most of us have been brought up to accept that forces are independent ‘prime movers’. But what are forces? Without them, nothing in the universe could move? But forces have no structure or substance and so cannot be real.

A good reason why there has to be a fourth dimension is because it explains the nature of force. Imagine that our apparently three-dimensional universe is curved in a fourth dimension and forms the surface layer of a spherical four-dimensional globe. Now imagine that this globe is filled with an aether, any movements of which were caused by adjacent movements and so on, like a falling domino effect all the way back to the moment when the four-dimensional globe received an external impact, which scientists refer to as the Big Bang. Particles are tiny rotations of the aether (vortices), and on a much larger scale aether rotations cause the orbits of planets and galaxies, which are distributed over the surface of the globe. These circular and all other movements are not caused by forces, but by the movements of the aether. The four-dimensional globe also has billions of concentric spherical levels with a range of aether densities. The maximum aether density is on its outer surface and the minimum density is at the centre. Our five senses are how we detect the vibrations of five of these levels, which form the surface layer of our four-dimensional universe.

For example, the colour blue consists of waves of a specific frequency traveling along one of the concentric levels of the universe, which cause repetitive impressions on one’s eyes. And the same applies to our other senses. So we experience a range of four-dimensional levels all the time - not as different levels but as different senses. This is why scientists mistakenly believe only one level exists - a three-dimensional universe - but which they believe is curved in a fourth dimension.

Imagine movie cameras recording everything that happened in the so-called three-dimensional world, which we only viewed on flat two-dimensional TV screens. If we lived this way from birth we would not know that a third dimension existed and would not be able to visualize it even if we were told it existed. Although everything we saw on our TV screens varied in its distance from the camera we would see everything as one seamless flat picture. So it would be very difficult to believe that everything was separated from everything else in a third dimension. For example, if we saw images of objects that seemed to be decreasing or increasing in size as they moved across a TV screen, we would not be able to understand that the reason for this was because they were not only moving sideways (two-dimensionally) but also away from us or towards us (three-dimensionally). So our problems of trying to make sense of our flat TV world would be caused by the mistaken belief that we could see everything.

This delusion would lead scientists to create mathematical equations, which represented ‘change of size’ phenomena. And because they could do this successfully they would believe we inhabited a universe designed by a God who appreciated mathematics. On the other hand, if we suddenly became enlightened about the three-dimensional nature of our world and abandoned our TV screens, we would also have to abandon most of our mathematical equations … they cannot help us solve dimensional problems.

For example, in a flat TV world we would not be able to see what lay behind anything we viewed on our TV screens. So if an object moved because something that was hidden behind it caused the movement, we could not know the nature of what caused the object’s movement. But our ignorance would be compounded because we would believe we could see everything. So it would be very difficult to believe something could have caused the movement.

The same problem manifests in many ways in our supposedly three-dimensional universe, such as the inability to discover the mechanism of gravity. Once again, we believe we can see everything so how could such a mechanism exist? We do not understand such phenomena because we cannot visualize what causes them. However, if we could view the universe from a four-dimensional vantage point, say, at its centre, we could solve this problem.

Is there any hard evidence to justify the idea of different fourth-dimensional levels? A simple example is a prism, which apparently splits light up into the various colours of the spectrum by bending the various colours to different degrees. It is well known that light bends when it enters a denser medium. This can easily be seen to happen by observing a pencil dipped in a glass containing a liquid … the greater the density of the liquid, the more the pencil appears to bend when it enters the liquid. The question is: why do the various colours that make up white light bend to different degrees when they enter a prism, which has a constant density? In terms of different fourth-dimensional density levels, the reason is clear. A prism exists over a range of fourth-dimensional levels. And the various colours that make up white light also exist at different fourth-dimensional levels. So a low energy level colour, such as red, entering a low energy level of a prism bends less than a higher energy level colour, such as violet, which enters a higher energy level of the prism.

Another hard piece of evidence in favour of four-dimensional levels can be heard but not seen. It consists of our ears, the working parts of which are only a few millimetres in length but can apparently detect the wavelengths of waves much more than a metre in length, which is implausible. (The wavelength of the note middle-C on a piano is more than a metre in length and the length of the note an octave below middle-C is more than two metres in length and so on). However, if different sound waves travel at different four-dimensional levels, our four-dimensional ears would only have to detect the existence of pulses of sound energy traveling at different levels, not their wavelengths.

But perhaps the most obvious evidence in favour of the existence of four-dimensional energy levels is that light, radio and mobile phone waves etc., each of which has a different energy level, do not interfere with one another. This is because each energy level is separate from all the others rather than overlapping one another within the same three-dimensional space.
(Further information is available at http://www.thefourthdimension.info)
jeffrey.sharpe
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Re: One experiences the fourth dimension all the time.

Postby unicole » Tue Sep 16, 2014 6:01 pm

jeffrey.sharpe wrote:Is there any hard evidence to justify the idea of different fourth-dimensional levels? A simple example is a prism, which apparently splits light up into the various colours of the spectrum by bending the various colours to different degrees. It is well known that light bends when it enters a denser medium. This can easily be seen to happen by observing a pencil dipped in a glass containing a liquid … the greater the density of the liquid, the more the pencil appears to bend when it enters the liquid. The question is: why do the various colours that make up white light bend to different degrees when they enter a prism, which has a constant density? In terms of different fourth-dimensional density levels, the reason is clear. A prism exists over a range of fourth-dimensional levels. And the various colours that make up white light also exist at different fourth-dimensional levels. So a low energy level colour, such as red, entering a low energy level of a prism bends less than a higher energy level colour, such as violet, which enters a higher energy level of the prism.

Another hard piece of evidence in favour of four-dimensional levels can be heard but not seen. It consists of our ears, the working parts of which are only a few millimetres in length but can apparently detect the wavelengths of waves much more than a metre in length, which is implausible. (The wavelength of the note middle-C on a piano is more than a metre in length and the length of the note an octave below middle-C is more than two metres in length and so on). However, if different sound waves travel at different four-dimensional levels, our four-dimensional ears would only have to detect the existence of pulses of sound energy traveling at different levels, not their wavelengths.

But perhaps the most obvious evidence in favour of the existence of four-dimensional energy levels is that light, radio and mobile phone waves etc., each of which has a different energy level, do not interfere with one another. This is because each energy level is separate from all the others rather than overlapping one another within the same three-dimensional space.
(Further information is available at http://www.thefourthdimension.info)


This is the exact insight I was looking for about the electromagnetic spectrum and higher dimensions! If this is the case, is light, sound, other electromagnetic waves just a part of a higher dimension? Are they each dimensions we are experiencing as just a piece? (like the sphere in 2D) Or does this suggest just one dimension with many attributes that we are experiencing just as electromagnetic waves?????? How would these waves look from a 4D or 5D being?
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