Re: Wave Structure of Matter
Posted: Mon Jun 23, 2014 5:46 pm
Measured is the key word there.WanderingLands wrote:A "dimension" means a measurement or a quantity, which is Length, Width, and Height, which is what all objects contain. Thus, there cannot be more than three dimensions, that is, unless if there's any other actual quantity that can be measured.volatileworld wrote:Kant and post-Kantian German Idealism will come back in the context of modern physics. This 200 year old philosophy has a lot to teach modern scientists! Especially Hegel's ''Science of Logic'' in the context of quantum physics. I think Hegel is the culmination of continental philosophy.
I've been reading Wave Structure of Matter a couple of years ago. As far as I remember the author of this theory makes a mistake by regarding original transcendentally ideal space as 3D (correct me if I am wrong).
Transcendentally ideal space is static and 2D Euclidian. In my project I argue that original transcendentally ideal space is 2D holographic framework of 6D cells and the 3D non-Euclidian empirically real space appears after the synthesis of productive imagination.
How do you, though, define a "dimension"? How can there be such things as 6D?
There can be miracles if you believe!
Yeah 4 dimensions ok one that is part of 3, but 6, 8, 12 nine million, infinite, well if you can never perceive them isn't that just a convenience to get around maths problems by folding space until anything square fits into any round shaped hole, it's I think just an ongoing attempt to square the circle. It is useless if it doesn't have validity in any real sense.