A New Era of Thought - Charles H Hinton
A New Era of Thought - Charles H Hinton
A New Era of Thought - Charles H Hinton
'
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MATHEMATICS
Cornell University
Library
http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924068267602
A NEW ERA OF THOUGHT.
— — —
SCIENTIFIC ROMANCES.
By C. Howard Hinton, M.A.
Crown 8vo, cloth gilt, 6s. ; or separately, is. each.
GHOSTS EXPLAINED.
*' A short treatise of admirable clearness. Mr. Hinton brings u.s,
. . .
SECOND SERIES.
I. On the Education of the Imagination.
2. Many Dimensions, is.
3f ffnlron
and diagrams.
ALICIA BOOLE,
H. JOHN FALK.
PART I.
PAGE
Introduction . . -1-7
CHAPTER 1.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI.
CHAPTER VII.
CHAPTER VIII.
CHAPTER IX.
CHAPTER X.
CHAPTER XI.
PART II.
CHAPTER I.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER VI.
CHAPTER Vn.
Four-space : its Representation in Three-space . . 156-166
CHAPTER VIII.
CHAPTER IX.
CHAPTER X.
CHAPTER XI.
'
APPENDICES.
A. 100 Names used for Plane Space . ....198 197
B. 216 Names used for Cubic Space . .
this concrete matter, which we touch and feel, into the abstractions
of extension and impenetrability. It seems to me that I cannot
think of space without matter, and therefore, as no necessity com-
pels me to such a course, I do not split up the concrete object into
there were a matter physically higher than this matter of ours, and
xiv Introductory Note to Part I.
to choose the best means of liberating our minds from the limita-
tions imposed on it by the particular conditions under which we
are placed. The second part of the task is somewhat laborious,
of a trial.
and one becomes inclined to think that the right direction to look
is, not away from matter to spiritual existences, but towards the
discovery of conceptions of higher matter, and thereby of. those
material existences whose definite relations to us are apprehended
as spiritual intuitions. Thus, " material " would simply mean
" grasped by the intellect, become known and familiar.'' Our ap-
prehension of anything which is not expressed in terms of matter,
is vague and indefinite. To realize and live with that which we
vaguely discern, we need to apply the intuition of higher matter to
the world around us. And this seems to me the great inducement
to this study. Let us form our intuition of higher space, and then
look out upon the world.
using the little cubes we can go through the process ourselves, and
learn what it is in a little instance.
But of all the ways in which the confidence gained from this
but there is a higher being than ours. What our relation to it is,
we cannot tell, for that is. unlike our relation to anything we know.
But, perhaps all that happens to us is, could we but grasp it, our
relation to it.
C. H. H.
A NEW ERA OF THOUGHT.
PART I.
INTRODUCTION.
There are no new truths in this book, but it consists
of an effort to impress upon and bring home to the
mind some of the more modern developments of thought.
A few sentences of
Kant, a few leading ideas of Gauss
and Lobatschewski form the material out of which it
is built up.
It may be thought to be unduly long ; but it must
be remembered that in these times there is a twofold
process going on — one of discovery about external
nature, one of education, by which our minds are
brought into harmony with that which we know. In
certain respects we find ourselves brought on by the
—
general current of ideas we feel that matter is permanent
and cannot be annihilated, and it is almost an axiom
in our minds that energy is persistent, and all its trans-
formations remains the same in amount. But there are
other directions in which there is need of definite train-
ing if we are to enter into the thoughts of the time.
And it seems to me that a return to Kant, the creator
of modern philosophy, is the first condition. Now of
Kant's enormous work only a small part is treated here,
but with the difference that should be found between the
work of a master and that of a follower. Kant's state-
2 A New Era of Thought.
CHAPTER I.
but the two things, the plant and our thought of it,
come as it were from different sides they just touch —
each other as far as the colour and shape are concerned,
but as structures and as living organisms they are as
wide apart as possible.
Of course by observation and study the image of a
plant which we bear in our minds may be made to re-
1
Beginning of Knowledge. 1
is a residual element.
22 New Era of Thought.
—
Now there are two steps one an intellectual one of
understanding, one a practical one of carrying out the
view. Neither is a moral step. One demands intelli-
gence, the other the formation of a habit, and this habit
can be" inculcated by precept, by reward and punish-
ment, by various means. But as human nature is
constituted,if the habit of justice is inculcated it touches
sible for him to eat his cakes first and learn to play
cricket afterwards —
the cricket will not come to him as
a thwarting in any sense of what he likes better. But
this ease in entering in to the pursuit only shows that
the boy's nature is already developed to the level of
enjoying the game. The distinct moral advance would
come such a case when something which at first was
in
hard to him to do was presented to him and the hard- —
ness, the unpleasantness is of a double kind, the giving
up of a pursuit or indulgence to which he is accustomed,
Theory and Practice. 27
KNOWLEDGE : SELF-ELEMENTS.
Knowledge : Self-elements. 3
Knowledge: Self-elements. 33
CHAPTER VI.
about the world they are not reality itself, and their
;
nature.
And it be found that the deadness which we
will
ascribe to the external world is not really there, but is
studying the bounding lines, which are all that he can see
or touch, come to the conclusion that they are equal and
similar in every respect and he can conceive the one
;
and then put them down, then the plane-being has pre-
sented to him two triangles, as shown in Fig. 2.
And he studies these, he finds that they are equal
if
in sizeand similar in every respect. But he cannot
make the one occupy the same space as the other one ;
Noie. —For my own part I should say that all those confusions in
remembering which come from an image taking the place of the
original mental model —
as, for instance, the difficulty in remember-
ing which way to turn a screw, and the numerous cases of images
—
in thought transference may be due to a toppling over in the
brain, four-dimensionalwise, of the structures formed —
which
structures would be absolutely safe from being turned into image
structures if the brain molecules moved only three-dimensional-
wise.
It is remarkable how
in science " explaining " means
the reference movements and tendencies to
of the
movement of the masses about us to the movements
and tendencies to movement of the minute portions of
matter.
Thus, the behaviour of gaseous bodies the pressure —
which they exert, the laws of their cooling and inter-
mixture are explained by tracing the movements of the
very minute particles of which they are composed.
CHAPTER VIII.
new direction.
Then, just as in space objects, a cube, for instance,
can stand on the surface of a table, or on the surface
over which the plane-being moves, so on the aether can
stand a higher solid.
All that the plane-being 'sees or touches of a cube,
is the square on which it rests.
and also by the different views of one and the same solid
body which he got by turning the body over, so that
different parts of its surface come into contact with his
plane.
And work of learning to think in four-
the practical
dimensional space, to go through the appearances
is
no breach of continuity.
The surface of the aether must then be supposed to
have the properties of the surface of a fluid only, of;
of inertia.
That is to say, taking a disk or a plane world as a
specimen, the whole disk is sliding on the aether in
virtue of a certain momentum which it has, and certain
portions of its matter fit into the grooves in the aether,
and move along those grooves.
The size of the portions is determined by the size of
62 A New Era of Thought.
feeling, what that body is, what the vine is. If to know
it would take away our feeling, then it were well never
all the others come with regard to that. All the others
are right or left, up or down, near or far, with regard to
that particular cube. And the line of cubes starting
from this first one, which we take as the direction in
which we look, is, as it were, an axis about which the
rest of the cubes are grouped. We learn the block with
regard to this axis, so that we can mentally conceive
the disposition of every cube as it comes regarded from
Perception and Inspiration. 77
his view, and thus get to know humanity from more than
one axis. Thus there springs up a feeling of humanity,
and of more.
Those who feel superficially with a great many people,
are like those learners who have a slight acquaintance
with a block of cubes from many points of view. Those
who have some deep attachments, are like those who
know them well from one ortwo points of view.
Thus there are two definite paths —
one by which the
instinctive feeling is called out and developed, the other
by which we gain the faculty of rationally apprehending
and learning the higher beings.
In the one way it is by the exercise of a sympathetic
and active life in the other, by the study of higher
;
space.
Both should be followed ; but the latter way is more
accessible to those who are not good. For we at any
!
" For,"
mind before we can observe things in space.
he says, everything we conceive is conceived as
" since
A
practical designer of machines would not find the
knowledge of geometrical analysis of immediate help to
him ; and an artist or draughtsman still less so.
Now, my inquiry was, whether it was possible to get
the same power of conception of four-dimensional space,
as the designer and draughtsman have of three-dimen-
sional space. It is possible.
And
with this power it is possible for us to design
machines in higher space, and to conceive objects in
this space, just as a draughtsman or artist does.
Analytical not of much use in designing a
skill is
statue or inventing a machine, or in appreciating the
detail of either a work of art or a mechanical con-
trivance.
And hitherto the study of four-dimensional space has
been conducted by analysis. Here, for the first time,
the fact of the power of conception of four-dimensional
space is demonstrated, and the means of educating it
are given.
And I propose a complete system of work, of which
the volume on four space ^ is the first instalment.
—
that it consists of two parts one a set of rules as to the
management of our relations to the physical world about
us, and to our own bodies another, a set of rules as to
;
apprehended fallaway.
To us, looking with half-blinded eyes at merely our
own little slice of existence, our filmy all, it seemed
that altruism meant disorder, vagary, danger.
But when we put it into practice in knowledge, we
find that it means the direct revelation of a higher
comes to ruin.
But what does this mean > Surely it is simply this,
best aid.
Let a man care
for any one object let his regard —
for be as concentrated and exclusive as you will,
it
true to all.
CHAPTER I.
for any such question, but simply call the smooth surface,
along which it moves, Space.
Such a being could not tell the colour of the square
traced by the Orange line. The square would be
bounded by the lines which surround it, and only by
breaking through one of those lines could the plane-
being discover the colour of the square.
In trying to realize the experience of a plane-being
it is best to suppose that its two dimensions are upwards
ask what lies between the Orange line and the Reddish
line, we know it is a square, for the Orange line moving
in any direction gives a square. And, if the six models
were before the plane-being, he could easily select that
which showed what he wanted. For that which lies
between Orange line and Reddish line must be bounded
by Orange and Reddish lines. He would search among
the six models lying beside each other on his plane, till
he found the Dark-blue square. It is evident that only
one other square differs fn all its colours from the Black
square, viz., the White square. For it is entirely sepa-
rate. The others meet it in one of their lines. This
total difference exists in all the pairs of opposite sur-
faces on the cube.
Now, suppose the plane-being asked himself what
would appear if the cube turned round the Blue line.
The cube would begin to pass through his space. The
Crimson linewould disappear beneath the plane and
the Blue-green square would cut it, so that opposite to
the Blue line in the plane there would be a Blue-green
line. The French-grey line and the Dark-slate line
would be cut in points, and from the Gold point to the
French-grey point would be a Dark-blue line and ;
a a
Lines.
Model I.
Four-Space. Genesis of a Tessaract. 121
„ Deep-yellow,, g
„ Green „
Four-Space. Genesis of a Tessaract, 123
Lines :
4 6
1. Brown-green Smoke Dark-purple
2. Dark-green Crimson Magenta
3. Pale-yellow Magenta Green-grey
4. Dark Dull-green Light-green
Points :
On upper face :
—
it, and he knows that, if it moves an inch in some
mysterious direction, it traces a new kind of figure, the
opposite boundary whereof is the White square. If,
Olus
Three-Space by Names, and in a Plane. 137
i
138 A New Era of Thought.
-X-
Urna MoUi
Ostrunt
FglO.
\_Toface p. 141.
Three-Space by Names, and in a Plane. 141
0)
Z
O -X
Sfcfcr TTcnum Urna
F.g. 13
-Z -z -z
BiJeu BtdeiU
Mocnt Mociu
TllcMK
Fi«f5
'5- %'&
z
[To /ace ^. 147.
Three-Space by Names, and in a Plane. 147
CHAPTER VI.
Z
Comes Tibicen Vestis
Ostrum Bidens Scena
Urna Moles Saltus
X
And in Z X we have the Alvus of
Mars
Al vus Moend
-X
Jyces
Rgy
-Z
[ To face ^. r'so.
r~L
fl/
-X
(1)
%'8 f^)
f
2 2
-X
r/) r^)
(3)
r.^. 19
\Tiifocep. 151,
Plane-Being' s Conception of our Figures. 151
X
Z quadrant, we have the
so as to be projected on the
squares— Urna Alvus, Frenum Alvus, Uncus Alvus,
Spicula Alvus. When it is turned round the X
axis,
and projected on Z X, we have the squares, Urna Syce,
Moles Syce, Plebs Syce, and no more. This is what is
ordinarily called the ground plan but we have set it in a
;
Mora.
It will be obvious on trial that a shape can be instantly
recognised from its three projections, if the Block be
thoroughly well known in all three positions. Any
difficulty in the realization of theshapes comes from the
arbitrary habit of associating the cubes with some one
direction in which they happen to go with regard to us.
If we remember Ostrum as above Urna, we are not
remembering the Block, but only one particular relation
of the Block to us. That position of Ostrum is a fact
as much related to ourselves as to the Block. There is,
of course, some information about the Block implied in
that position ; but it is so mixed with information about
ourselves as to be ineffectual knowledge of the Block.
It is of the highest importance to enter minutely into
all the details of solution written above. For, corre-
sponding to every operation necessary to a plane-being
for the comprehension of our world, there is an opera-
tion, with which we have to become familiar, if in our
turn we would enter into some comprehension of a
world higher than our own. Every cube of the Block
ought to be thoroughly known in all its relations. And
the Block must be regarded, not as a formless mass out
of which shapes can be made, but as the sum of all
possible shapes, from which any one we may choose is a
selection. In fact, to be familiar with the Block, we
ought to know every shape that could be made by any
selection of its cubes or, in other words, we ought to
;
CHAPTER VII.
that not only the Gold square, but also the Orange and
every other square in the first set of slabs must have two
other squares set somewhere beyond it on the plane to
represent the extension of the Block away, or in the
unknown Y direction.
Coming now to the representation of a four-dimen-
sional block, we see that we can show only three dimen-
sions by cubic blocks, and that the. fourth can only be
represented by repetitions of such blocks. There must
be a certain amount of arbitrary naming and colouring.
The colours have been chosen as now stated. Take the
firstBlock of the 81 Set. We are familiar vi^ith its
colours,and they can be found at any time by reference
to Model I. Now, suppose the Gold cube to represent
what we can see in our space of a Gold tessaract the ;
Representation of Four-Space. 159
the right, Arctos and Ilex above it, Dos and Cista away
Third Block.
. r Solia Livor' Talus
PP f I
Lensa Lares Calor
^'°°''-
Uelis Tholus Passer
Second Block.
Orsa Mango Libera
Upper
Creta Velum Meatus
Floor.
Lucta Limbus Pator
Lorica Offex
Lower J ^ Lar 011a
^'""""•lops Lotus Limus
First Block.
Semita Lama
UPP^"- Via Mel Iter
Fl""---
(.Ilex Callis Sors
2 to Margo,
and Model 9 to the intermediate block.
When we take the view of the tessaract with which
we commenced, and in which Arctos goes Z, Cuspis X,
Dos Y, and Ops W, we see Mala in our space. But
when the tessaractturned so that the Ops line goes
is
- X, while Cuspis is W, the other two remaining
turned
as they were, then we do not see Mala, but that cube
which, in the original position of the tessaract, contains
the Z, Y, W, directions, that is, the Vesper cube.
A plane-being may begin to study a block of cubes
by Syce squares but if the block be turned round
their ;
CHAPTER VIII.
The names used for the cubes, as they are before us,
are as follows :
Third Block.
Arcus Mala Ovis Mala Portio Mala
Third
'
Second Block.
r Ara Mala Vomer Mala Pluma Mala
Third
^, \ Praeda Mala Sacerdos Mala Hydra Mala
^^°°''- I Cortex Mala Mica Mala Flagellum Mala
Second
(P""™ Mala Glans Mala Colus Mala
Floor. )
°"^^ M^l^ Tessera Mala Domitor Mala
<. Cardo Mala Cudo Mala Malleus Mala
First Block.
First f
Mala
S^'^'o"' Hama Mala Remus Mala
Floor. )
Frenum Mala PlebsMala Sypho Mala
I Urna Mala Moles Mala Saltus Mala
——
Representation of Four-Space by Name. 169
Z X Y W
a c d
where a stands for Arctos, c for Cuspis, d for Dos,
and for Ops, and the other letters for the four axes in
space, a, c, d, are the axes of the tessaract, and can
take up different directions in space with regard to us.
Z X Y W
a c d
170 A New Era of Thought.
Second Block.
Co-„ J Tri« f Ocrea Mala Tessera Mala
Second Floor.j^^^^^
^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^
First Block.
Uncus Mala Pallor Mala
Second Floor.
-^
strum Mala Bidens Mala
VesbCTS M&la«
C^rio Oshi Ofitivm Bidina
%-20.
[To/ace p. lyi'
— . ,
Second Block.
fTessara Pallor
Second Floor.-. „ , „.
ICudo Bidens
First Block.
roc
)crea Uncus
Second .
Floor.-, „ ,
^
\Ca
(.Cardo
^
Ostrum
_. _, ( Crates Frenum
First Floor. -^ „, ,
LThyrsus Urna
The name Vesper is left out in the above list for the
sake of brevity, but should be used in studying the
positions.
On comparing the two lists of the Mala view and
Vesper view, it will be seen that the cubes presented in
the Vesper view are new sides of the tessaract, and that
the arrangement of them is different from that in the
Mala view. (This is analogous to the changes in the
•slabs from the Moena to Alvus view of the cubic Block.)
Of course, the Vespers of all these tessaracts are not
visible at once in our space, any more than are the
Moenas of all three walls of a cubic Block to a plane-
being. But if the tessaractic Set be supposed to move
through space in the unknown direction at the rate
of an inch a minute, the Second Block will present
its Vespers after the First Block has lasted a minute.
The relative position of the Mala Block and the Vesper
Block may be represented in our space as in the dia-
gram, Fig. 20. But it must be distinctly remembered
that this arrangement is quite conventional, no more
real than a plane-being's symbolization of the Moena
:
/ Frenum Plebs
First Floor.
I Crates Cura
First Block,
Bidens
Second Floor.jO^''?'"
I Cardo Cudo
T- . -c^ r*Urna Moles
First Floor. \ „, ,,..^
I Thyrsus Vitta
174 -^ New Era of Thought.
Mala, but that which contains the lines Dos, Cuspis, and
Ops. This side is Model 3, and is called Lar. Under-
neath the place which was occupied by Urna Mala, will
come Urna Lar under the place of Moles Mala, Moles
;
Z XY W
c d a
Second Block.
, ^, f Uncus Pallor
Second Floor. i ^ . „.,
tOstrum Bidens
_. _, fOcrea Tessera
First Floor. \n a /-j
LCardo Cudo
First Block.
Frenum Plebs
Second Floor..
^U^^^
•In Moles
Crates Cura
First Floor. \
Thyrsus Vitta
10), and then Urna Velum (Model 4), and similarly the
sections and Velums of each tessaract in the Set. When
the First Block has passed Kata our space, Ostrum
Lar enters and the Lars of the Second Block of tessa-
;
left, the nine of the left side of the Third Block. This
Block of twenty-seven now represents Vesper Cubes,
which have only one square identical with the Mala
177 N
1 78 A New Era of Thought.
CYCLICAL PROJECTIONS.
we get
Z X
-
Y ' and if, then, we turn it round Dos we get
Z
,
XY or simply da c , This last is another position in
180
Cyclical Projections. i8l
which all the lines are positive, and the projections, in-
Second (
Tibicen Mora Merces
Pallor Cortis
Floor. Kl f"^
Moles
(. Plebs Hama
•
Comes Spicula Mars
First
Ostrum Uncus Ala
Floor.
. Urna Frenum Sector
Remus
1 82 A New Era of Thought.
Saltus
Cyclical Projections. i8 p
Oliva.
CHAPTER XI.
w
J
m
<
X
I
X
o
—
iQO A New Era of Thought.
The tessaracts
{e.g. Urna, Ostrum, Comes), which ran Z still run Z.
{e.g. Urna, Frenum, Sector), „ Y „ Y.
{e.g. Urna, Moles, Saltus), „ X now run W.
{e.g. Urna, Thyrsus, Cervix), „ W „ - X.
The tessaracts
{e.g. Urna, Ostrum, Comes), which ran Z still run Z.
{e.g. Urna, Moles, Saltus), „ X „ X.
{e.g. Urna, Frenum, Sector), „ Y now run W.
{e.g. Urna, Thyrsus, Cervix), „ W „ - Y.
The tessaracts
{e.g. Urna, Moles, Saltus), which ran X still run X.
{e.g. Urna, Frenum, Sector), „ Y „ Y.
{e.g. Urna, Ostrum, Comes), „ Z now run W.
{e.g. Urna, Thyrsus, Cervix), „ W „ - Z.
in the extreme - W
block, whose place its (the given
Mala would occupy, if the tessaractic set
tessaract's)
moved Kata until the given tessaract reached our space.
Or, in other words, if all the tessaracts were transparent
except those which constitute the body under considera-
tion, and if a light shone through Four-space from the
Ana ( W) side to the Kata ( - W) side, there would be
darkness in each of those Malas, which would be occu-
pied by the Mala of any opaque tessaract, if the tes-
saractic set moved Kata.
Let us look at the set of 81 tessaracts we have built
up in the Mala arrangements, and trace the projections
in the extreme - W block of the thirteen of our shape.
The latter are printed in italics in Table A, and their
projections are marked J.
Thus the cube Uncus Mala is the projection of the
tessaract Orcus, Pallor Mala of Pallor and Tessera and
Tacerta, Bidens Mala of Cudo, Frenum Mala of Frenum
and Polus, Plebs Mala of Plebs and Cura and Penates,
Moles Mala of Moles and Vitta, Urna Mala of Urna.
Similarly, we can trace the Vesper projections (Table
B). Orcus Vesper is the projection of the tessaracts
Orcus and Lacerta, Ocrea Vesper of Tessera, Uncus
Vesper of Pallor, Cardo Vesper of Cudo, Polus Vesper
of Polus and Penates, Crates Vesper of Cura, Frenum
Vesper of Frenum and Plebs, Urna Vesper of Urna and
Moles, Thyrsus Vesper of Vitta. Next in the Pluvium
presentation (Table C) we find that Bidens Pluvium is
the projection of the tessafact Pallor, Cudo Pluvium of
Cudo and Tessera, Luctus Pluvium of Lacerta, Verbum
Pluvium of Orcus, Urna Pluvium of Urna and Frenum,
Moles Pluvium of Moles and Plebs, Vitta Pluvium of
Vitta and Cura, Securis Pluvium of Penates, Cervix
Pluvium of Polus. Lastly, in the Lar presentation
(Table D) we observe that Frenum Lar is the projection
: : : : ; ;
Mala projections
Uncus, Pallor, Bidens, Frenum, Plebs, Moles, Urna.
Vesper projections
Orcus, Ocrea, Uncus, Cardo, Polus, Crates, Frenum,
Urna, Thyrsus.
Pluvium projections
Bidens, Cudo, Luctus, Verbum, Urna, Moles, Vitta,
Securis, Cervix.
Lar projections
Frenum, Plebs, Moles, Urna, Cura, Vitta, Polus,
Penates.
O
194 -^ New Era of Thought.
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202 A New Era of Thought.
APPENDIX D.
Region of Tessaract in
Colour.
Black
White
Vermilion
Orange
Light-yellow
Bright-green
Bright-blue
Light-grey
Indian-red
Yellow-ochre
Buff
Wood
Brown-green
Sage-green
Reddish
Chocolate
French-grey
Brown
Dark-slate
Dun
Orange-vermilion
Stone
Quaker-green
Leaden
Dull-green
Indigo
Dull-blue
Dark-purple
Pale-pink
Dark-blue
Earthen
Blue
Terracotta
Oak
Yellow
Appendix. 203
Region of Tessaract in
Colour, Symbol.
Tessaract. 81 Set.
Green
204 A New Era of Thought.
APPENDIX E.
A Theorem in Four-space.
will meet in n, and A C and a' c' produced, will meet in o. The
two triangles ABC and a' b' c' are such, that the lines joining
A to a', B to b', and C to c', will, if produced, meet in a point,
namely, the point on the base ABC which is the projection of D.
Any two triangles which fulfil this condition are the possible base
and projection of the section of a pyramid therefore the sides of
;
such triangles, if produced in pairs, will meet (if they are not
parallel) in three points which lie in one straight line.
A four-dimensional pyramid may be defined as a figure bounded
by a polyhedron of any number of sides, and the same number of
pyramids whose bases are the sides of the polyhedron, and whose
apices meet in a point not in the space of the base.
If a four-dimensional pyramid on a tetrahedral base be cut by a
space which passes through the four sides of the pyramid in such
a way that the sides of the sectional figure be not parallel to the
sides of the base then the sides of these two tetrahedra, if produced
;
in pairs, will meet in lines which all lie in one plane, namely, the
plane of intersection of the space of the base and the space of the
section.
Appendix. 205
that the hne joining the angles of the one to the angles of the
other will, if produced, meet in a point, which point is the projec-
tion of the apex of the four-dimensional pyramid.
Any two tetrahedra which fulfil this condition, are the possible
base and projection of a section of a four-dimensional pyramid.
Therefore, in any two such tetrahedra, where the sides of the one
a:re not parallel to the sides of the other, the sides, if produced in
pairs (one side of the one with one side of the other), will meet in
four straight lines which are all in one plane.
APPENDIX F.
Monstrum, Miles.
4. Syce Amphora, Castrum, Myrtus, Rota, Palma, Meta, Trabs,
:
Ratis.
Alvus:, Dexter, Princeps, Moena, Aes, Merum, Oculus, Littus,
Fulmen.
Civis,
Moena Gens, Ventus, Navis, Finis, Monstrum, Cursus.
:
Venator.
Alvus Triumphus, Tellus, Caterva, Lignum, Haedus, Pruinus,
:
Answers.-
The shapes are :
Ostrum.
7. Syce Sypho, Saltus, Moles, Urna, Frenum, Sector.
:
Appendix. 207
Answers.
The shapes are
1. Moles, Plebs, Sypho, Pallor, Mora, Tibicen, Spicula.
2. Urna, Moles, Plebs, Hama, Cortis, Merces, Remus.
3. Moles, Bidens, Tibicen, Mora, Plebs, Hama, Remus.
4. Frenum, Plebs, Sypho, Tergum, Oliva, Moles, Hama.
5. Urna, Moles, Plebs, Hama, Remus, Pallor, Mora, Tibicen,
Mars, Merces, Comes, Sector.
6. Ostrum, Comes, Tibicen, Vestis, Scena, Tergum, Oliva, Tyro,
Aer, Remus, Hama, Sector, Merces, Mars, Ala.
7. Sypho, Saltus, Moles, Urna, Frenum, Uncus, Spicula, Mars.
8. Plebs, Pallor, Mora, Bidens, Merces, Cortis, Ala.
9. Bidens, Tibicen, Vestis, Scena, Oliva, Mora, Spicula, Mars,
Ala.
10. Urna, Ostrum, Comes, Spicula, Mars, Tibicen, Vestis, Oliva,
Tyro, Aer, Remus, Sector, Ala, Saltus, Scena.
11. Frenum, Plebs, Sypho, Hama, Cortis, Merces, Mora.
APPENDIX G.
exercises are in the 81 Set, and the rest in the 256 Set.
I. Mala projection : Urna, Moles, Plebs, Pallor, Cortis, Merces.
Lar projection Urna, Moles, Plebs, Cura, Penates, Nepos.
:
Arcus.
'
Securis.
Vesper : Mars, Ara, Arcus, Postis, Orcus, Polus.
6. Mala : Pallor, Mora, Oliva, Tyro, Merces, Mars, Spicula,
Comes, Tibicen, Vestis.
Lar : Plebs, Cura, Penates, Vulcan, Angusta, Nepos, Telum,
Polus, Cervix, Securis, Vinculum.
Pluvium Bidens, Cudo, Luctus, Troja, Axis, Aries.
:
Lapis.
Pluvium : Acus, Torus, Malleus, Flagellum, Thorax, Aries,
Aestas, Capella.
Vesper Pardus, Rostrum, Ardor, Pilum, Ara, Arcus, Aestus,
:
Septum.
8. Mala Pallor, Tergum, Aer, Tyro, Cortis, Syrma, Ursa, Fama,
:
Naxos, Erisma.
Lar Plebs, Cura, Limen, Vulcan, Angusta, Nepos, Cera,
:
Rheda, Rapina.
Vesper Uncus, Ocrea, Orcus, Postis, Arcus, Aestus, Cussis,
:
Dolium, Alexis.
9. Mala: Fama, Conjux, Reus, Torus, Acus, Myrrha, Sypho,
Plebs, Pallor, Mora, Oliva, Alpis, Acies, Hircus.
Lar Missale, Fortuna, Vita, Pax, Furor, Ira, Vulcan, Penates,
:
Answers.
The shapes are :
APPENDIX H.
Sections of Cube and Tessaract.
There are three kinds of sections of a cube.
1. The sectional plane, which is in all cases supposed to be
cube that is, parallel to two of the lines meeting in Corvus, and
;
P
— ;
from Corvus are not cut at all, and that the Y line is cut at half-
a-unit from Corvus.
be squares.
Takethe second case.
Let the plane cut Cuspis and Dos, each at half-a-unit from Cor-
vus, and not cut Arctos or Arctos produced ; it will also cut through
the middle points of Via and Callis. The figure produced, is a
rectangle which has two sides of one unit, and the other two are
each the diagonal of a half-unit squared.
If the plane cuts Cuspis and Dos, each at one unit from Corvus,
and is parallel to Arctos, the figure will be a rectangle which has
two sides of one unit in length ; and the other two the diagonal
of one unit squared.
If the plane passes through Mala, cutting £)os produced and
Cuspis produced, each at one-and-a-half unit from Corvus, and is
parallel to Arctos, the figure will be a parallelogram like the one
This
O
ZXY ZXY
ZXY O.I.I
set of figures will
. O.lJ.lJ
\ . \
be expressed
it being understood that where Roman figures are used, the numbers
do not refer to the length of unit cut off
means that Arctos is not cut at all, and that Cuspis and Dos are
cut, Dos being cut twice as far from Corvus as is Cuspis.
These figures will also be rectangles.
Take the third case.
1
Appendix. 2 1
Suppose Arctos, Cuspis, and Dos are each cut half-way. This
figure is an equilateral triangle, whose sides are the diagonal of
a half-unit squared. The figure
Z X Y is also an equi-
or
Z X Y but we must learn them as a two-dimensional
J JJ JJ-
being would, so that we may see how to learn the three-dimensional
sections of a tessaract.
evident that the resulting figures are the same whether we
It is
fix the cube, and then turn the sectional plane to the required
position, or whether we fix the sectional plane, and then turn the
cube. Thus, in the first case we might hav« fixed the plane, and
then so placed the cube that one plane side coincided with the
sectional plane, and then have drawn the cube half-way through, in
a direction at right angles to the plane, when we should have seen
we might have put the cube with Arctos coinciding with the plane
and with Cuspis and Dos equally inclined to it, and then have
drawn the cube through the plane at right angles to it until the'
lines (Cuspis and Dos) were cut at the required distances fromCorvus.
In the third case we might have put the cube with only Corvus
coinciding with the plane and with Cuspis, Dos, and Arctos equally
to the plane, Arctos would disappear at once and to find out what
;
he would see he would have to take the square sections of the cube,
and find on each of them what lines are given by the new set of
sections. Thus he would take Moena itself, which may be re-
garded as the first section of the square set. One point of the
figure would be the middle point of Cuspis, and since the sectional
plane is parallel to Arctos, the line of intersection of Moena with
the sectional plane will be parallel to Arctos. The required line
then cuts Cuspis half-way, and is parallel to Arctos, therefore it
gram, having two of its sides, each one unit in length, and the
other two each d (|)^.
He could also see that the angles are right, because the lines
a c and b d are made up of the X
and Y directions, and the
other two, a b and c d, are purely Z, and since they have no tendency
in common, they are at right angles to each other.
way between Moena and Murex, Murex and another square which
he would have to regard as an imaginary section half-a-unit
further Y than Murex (Fig. 22). He might now draw a ground
plan of the sections that is, he would draw Syce, and produce
;
cias
Cuspis
Ground-plan oF Seetionr
sAcun in /igi 22 .
F,g.23.
F.g.24.
\Toface #. 213.
Appendix. 213
half-way section he would have the point a (Fig. 23), and in Murex
the point c. In the imaginary section he would have g ; but this
he might disregard, since the cube goes no further than Murex.
From the points c and a there would be lines going Z, so that Iter
and Semita would be cut half-way.
He could find out how far the two lines a b and^ c d (Fig. 22)
are apart by referring d and b to Lama, and a and c to Crus.
In taking the third order of sections, a similar method may be
followed.
Suppose the sectional plane to cut Cuspis, Dos, and Arctos,
each at one unit from Corvus. He would first take Moena, and
as the sectional plane passes through Ilex and Nugje, the line on
Moena would be the diagonal passing through these two points
Then he would take Murex, and he would see that as the plane
cuts Dos at one unit from Corvus, all he would have is the point
Cista. So the whole figure is the Ilex to Nugas diagonal, and the
point Cista.
Now Cista and Ilex are each one inch from Corvus, and
measured along lines at right angles to each other therefore, they
;
then produce Arctos and Dos until they were each i^ unit long,
and join their extremities, when he would see that Via and Bucina
are each cut'half-way. Again, by turning Syce into his plane, and
2 14 -^ New Era of Thought.
The angles he would not have got in this observation, and they
might be a serious difficulty to him. It should be observed that
a similar difficulty does not come to us in our observation of the
sections of a tessaract for, if the angles of each side of a solid
:
and as the Z, X, and Y lines are cut equally from Corvus, he would
conclude that the X and Y lines are cut the same distance from
Ilex as the Z line, that is half-a-unit. He knows that the X line
is cut at \\ units from Corvus ; that is, half-a-unit from Nugas :
I . I . II
Hewould always have to bear in mind that the ratio of the
lengths of the Z, X, and Y lines is the same from Corvus to the
sectional plane as from any other point to the sectional plane.
Thus, if he were taking a section where the plane cuts Arctos and
Cuspis at one unit from Corvus and Dos at one-and-a-half, that
is where the ratio of Z and of X to Y is as two to three, he would
see that Dos itself is not cut at all but from Cista to the point
;
once but he who has to look at it from a point in the plane can
;
jippenatx. 2 1
Z
26 is a section taken i
z
27 li
28 2
Z
•^^ ^ 29 is a section taken i
]
30 \\
I
C31 2
32 2j
The above are sections of a tessaract. Figures 33 to 35 are of
a tetra-tessaract. The supposed to be imbedded
tetra-tessaract is
in a tessaract, and the sections are taken through it, cutting the Z
X and Y lines equally, and corresponding to the figures given of
the sections of the tessaract.
Z X Y W
Z X Y W f
^^ '^ * section taken o . ^ . ^ . ^
PART II. APPENDIX K.
Model i. MALA.
Model 2. MARGO.
<t\^*
6f
PART II. APPENDIX K.
Model 3. LAR.
Ca.du
Syee >">?
„os
CO^'
^*
^v^"
otus
O <%t...^
A'' appc
Of /i
Luca.
%<
223
PART II. APPENDIX K.
Model 4. VELUM.
Smmita, J'
Mel
Callu
\V*
JVianjo
Cr" i*'
ilu
•^.
'?( Tilos
V/ m
<i' Tliolu* ''*..
225
PART II, APPENDIX K.
Model s- VESPER.
227
PART II. APPENDIX K.
Model 6. IDUS.
*4
Libera
.^
V
PART ir. APPENDIX K.
Model 7. PLUVIUM.
J^oena-
p»?'
^t*^
SiltX .cV
b!
\^ *»l. • S
CV/T"-'" ^0^*"
0^'' Z.<7/«J
./ Luca
v^
331
PART II. APPENDIX K.
Model 8. TELA.
213
PART II, APPENDIX K.
\.Atr>-
\,u<i'
335
PART II. APPENDIX K.
Murtx
Mala
£l Motna
>A0
s. Trio,
<'•
SiUx
Vf^ °-».
's?;,
<..
^'
PART II. APPENDIX K.
841