No. The interface in the video always shows the user rotating in place, so where he is does not change, only things at a distance as the cross section rotates through different things. The rotation never changes the user's coordinates, only walking does, and one does not walk into solid things.isn’t it extremely likely, no, inevitable, that you could/would instantly find yourself inside of a solid object of some sort and instantly die? — Mp202020
Again, no. Anywhere else, but not where you're standing. You're always at the axis of (actually plane of) rotation, so rotating does not put you somewhere else (into a solid object say).The same way objects appear in thin air can happen right where you are standing
The 'other object' is at a different location per your description. At least one of its four coordinates is different than the one where you are.You can literally be standing in the same place another object in a separate 3rd dimensional cross section is currently standing at the same time but you are separated by the different 4D location you are at.
Not really what most are talking about when speaking of 'parallel dimensions',This is the concept of “parallel” dimensions
I see no need for protection at all.2- I do not understand why burrowing underground in your current 3D cross section would protect you any more than the 3D four-wall structure you built?
Just so, yes. Wonderful implementation done too. His (very capable) computer seems to have a rough time trying to keep up. Mine (not so capable) does even for a 3D world, and I have to turn the resolution and rendering distance down to keep the frame rate reasonable.The game simulates being able to perceive a 4th dimension as a 3-dimensional observer, essentially perceiving a 4th dimension, one 3-dimensional plane at a time. — Tzeentch
You'd still bump into things. — jorndoe
2. Imagine observeing the town throughout time — Tzeentch
Three spatial dimensions, one time dimension. Spacetime. Don't try to make time into a fictitious part of space. But who really cares? — jgill
wow man, I am in no way qualified to even engage with your response, I’m a mere layperson with some questions that popped up pertaining to the attached video, I cannot understand much of what you said. I’ll try to read over a few more times.
That being said I deeply appreciate the thought and effort you’ve chosen to spend on my questions. It’s really a beautiful work of art, thank you so much. The least I can do to show my appreciation is give it a very true attempt to understand everything you’ve laid out here. Thanks again, will get back to you after I chew on this. — Mp202020
To be honest, I understand very little about the mathematical underpinnings, but I think I understand your point. Time and distance behave differently so cannot be substituted - something that intuitively appears agreeable. — Tzeentch
Do you know why they behave differently? — Tzeentch
When writing down the example I realized that we cannot move back and forth in time as one could with distance, but there might be more to it? — Tzeentch
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.