jerrybilt said:
My two cents worth about straight lines:
A straight line is the shortest distance between two points.
A beam of light will take the shortest distance between two points.
If gravity bends the space through which the light is traveling then the light will follow a curved path and this will " look like" a "straight" line as it will be the shortest distance between two points.
Jerry.
Ah yes but..........that's not necessarily always true
We live in a 5 dimensional Euclidean phase space (i'll go into why its 5 and not 4 or 3 as the unwashed masses imagine in a minute), and the laws of geometry work as they do because in this universe, parallel lines do not converge and the angles in a right angled triangle add up to 180 degree. This is because the universe is flat. There may be other universes in the same 5 dimensional phase space that are not flat, and therefore there may be other geometries that are true. The problem is, they will make the same argument about us. So all lines look like they are straight, in any universe, but you can only tell the difference by observing from the next dimension up.
If you cant get you're head round it, let me use an allegory. You know that a rubiks cube has three dimensions up/down + left/right + nearer/further. However, you cannot OBSERVE this in a 3 dimensional space, because it contains no time. The 4th dimension, as is usually explained, is 'time'. This is not really true, in the same way one of the other dimensions is 'left'. You cannot have 'left' without 'right', and thus 'time' isnt a dimension, its a direction. There must also be an opposite' - 'antitime' or if you like 'reverse time'. So time is a direction, the name of the dimension its in is, lets call it, "Duration"
The only way to observe an object in 3 spatial dimensions is to include the 4th dimension of 'duration'. That allows you to perceive it, since you can see it moving and recognise. what it is. Thus , to tell the difference between straight lines in 4 dimensional phase spaces, you have to observe them in 5 dimensions. This must be true for at least 5 dimensions as far as we are concerned.
sorry, dangerous subject to get me on.
How did we build the first metal lathe then?