MightyKaykoher said:
Our eyes see a flat image which is perceived as 3d from the brain.
I don't think time is similar to the other three dimensions. I can't really see time, it just happens.
If we could see 3d, then I wonder if we could perceive the fourth? Or is the fourth not real, who knows! Still what expirements have been conducted?
Before we go any further, you need to understand something very important here, or else you will continue to run into this roadblock.
When scientists/physicists say something to the effect that we can "see" or "observe" such-and-such a thing, very seldom do they mean seeing these things
with the human eye! This is because, as
I've stated elsewhere, the human eye is really a very, VERY poor detector! Therefore, such observations are always done via a variety of instruments that can detect certain things with better sensitivity and beyond the range of what we can see.
Secondly, the term "dimensions" need to be clarify here. When you take a physics or chemistry lesson, you'll learn to analyze your result using dimensional analysis. This means in terms of length, time, charge, etc., which are the "dimensions" of the units. What you are specifically asking about here is the three
spatial dimensions and one
temporal dimensions. When you start talking about both spatial and temporal dimensions, one must make it clear that, while they are connected, they are not identical to each other!
Thirdly, the reason why we know, at least in our classical world, that these 3+1 dimensions are there and are needed is because when we solve, say the equation of motion of a system, we need ALL of them to accurately determine the dynamics! If I solve, say, a particle doing down a spiral, trying to accurately describe its trajectory in only 2D space will give a horribly wrong description! This has nothing to do with seeing it in 2D with my eyes and my brain processing it into 3D. It has everything to do with matching experimental observation!
Zz.