Max™
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Indeed, that's why I'm trying to help talk it out, perhaps we can find a way to explain it that is clearer than either of us tried on our own.
Max™ said:Yeah, that's a good way to describe it.
Interesting idea is if the 1-D space could self intersect, what would the 1-D observer see?
Regarding the dimensions passing through, a circle passing around the 1-D observer through his dimension would appear as two points on either side of him, that vanished mysteriously.
Extrapolating to higher dimensions is what you've been trying to do, and that is a good point to an extent.
In another way though, we have a 4 Dimensional object which can be described in terms of passing through a 3 Dimensional space, the Universe when considered correctly regarding Time.
The difference is, that 4 Dimensional shape completely fills the 3 Dimensional space as it passes, so we're aware of a change IN that shape, but we can not say that the shape is not present at this point or that point in 3 Space.
An object in a higher dimensional space could pass through in ways similar to what you're describing, but once you reach 3+ Dimensions, it is hard to pass a large extended space through one with smaller dimensionality unless you're only doing it in pieces, or if it is folded up in various ways such as the various Calabi-Yau manifolds.
Max™ said:Regarding the dimensions passing through, a circle passing around the 1-D observer through his dimension would appear as two points on either side of him, that vanished mysteriously.
Extrapolating to higher dimensions is what you've been trying to do, and that is a good point to an extent.
A 1D observer's visual organs would see points mysteriously appear on either side of him, and equally mysteriously vanish. How is that different?Let's take your example of the circle passing through the line. If we observe this from our 3D perspective, it happens pretty much the way you describe; two points appear and then disappear. However, this event as perceived from within the 1D space appears slightly differently.
Has anyone been suggesting such a thing?The 1D observer isn't looking around thinking, "Oh no, I'm trapped in a tiny line,"
If you're going to change the line into a 3-D space of beings made out of planes, you have to change the circle into a kind of hypercylinder (geometry R2xS1), and the thing our observer would see is a plane mysteriously appearing on either side of him, and then mysteriously vanishing.It also follows that any higher dimensional force or intersecting object (such as the circle) would have to originate from the very direction in which it is impossible to "look", which is parallel to the planes.
Hurkyl said:Your stacked plane example is still problematic. Your premise is flawed, I think; you want to create a 3D environment that I would perceive as one-dimensional... but for it to work, I would have to be made out of infinite planes, which I'm not.
Hurkyl said:I don't see why you think there is anything to be gained by first trying to imagine how a being made out of infinite, translation-symmetric planes would observe a (translation-symmetric) universe, rather than just trying to imagine a one-dimensional being in a one-dimensional universe directly.
Hurkyl said:The idea of something "originating" from a direction parallel to the planes breaks the symmetry of your universe; it seems like you've contradicting yourself.
The extra dimension of Kaluza-Klein geometry does exist for us. It is a direction in which we move constantly, and have been observing for centuries. The catch is that we call it "electromagnetism" and not "geometry".OB 50 said:There are directions that exists in higher dimensional space which simply do not exist for us. Consequently, compactified or not, additional dimensions will never be directly observable through any theoretical means of magnification, probing, or super-colliding.
We will always be looking in the wrong direction.
I am not limited by your lack of imagination.None of us are capable of truly thinking in 1D or 2D.
Hurkyl said:I am not limited by your lack of imagination.
OB 50 said:Before we start talking about higher dimensions, I want to make sure we're on the same page as far as the 1D scenario goes.QUOTE]
Moving on from the one dimensional situational and going back to the original statement of the thread, I’m still struggling to understand the imperative for additional dimensions. The proofs I’ve read have not been cogent. They start with reasonable premises and several pages of maths later a linear equation appears that can only be solved by D (no. of dimensions) being 26 or 10. I thought in my naivety when I first heard about string theory’s requirement for additional dimensions that there would be a vaguely topographical reason for this so I was surprised at the proofs I am presented with.
The main device appears to be to tensor contract the identity tensor which should give 4 but it is left as an open question and assigned the variable D. This gets reinserted into the Virasoro commutator extra term which is D/12(m^3-m). Later, in the bosonic case, the identity a = (D-2)/24 appears and since by now a = 1 (originally a <= 1) , D has to be 26. Further research by me, reveals that the Virasoro Lie group is a two dimensional group and doesn’t contain the parameter D but ĉ.
Notwithstanding this, if a string theorist was brave enough to take a step back from the detailed maths they would see the absurdity of the enterprise. At the beginning a supposedly water tight proof is given that bosons require 26 dimensions. Then, fermions are bolted onto the theory and low and behold the new theory requires 10 dimensions. Someone should by now have realized how wrong this was since nature presumably (unless infinite) has a fixed number of dimensions and remembering a previous discussion in this thread, that the extra dimensions in string theory are real space-time dimensions and not just a mathematical device, having different dimensionalities for different parts of nature appears contrived.
An attempt to solve this anomaly is made by the heterotic string theories which is a technical euphemism for having it both ways. Now the bosons still vibrate in 26 dimensions and the fermions in their 10. Strangely, the added term in the string (action) equation (the one that adds fermionic modes) can now have bosonic modes as well. Then, in the heterotic theories another term is added to the string (action) equation that has a SO(32) or E8 x E8 group symmetry.
My basic criticism, contrary to enthusiastic proponents who when questioned about the need for extra dimensions and supersymmetry and I have been to meetings where I have posed this question, is that the explanation of the allure of string theory is that it makes inevitable the final description of nature as oppose to the fine tinkering needed in the standard model. However, string theory is actually an unwieldy patchwork of ideas, cobbled together by increasingly desperate attempts to make it work.