Zanix
Diamond Member
I've been looking at this site.
It's easy for me to see the step from "flatland" to the third dimension, but I can't see it from the third to the fourth.
Here the author is talking about the Pseudosphere, which looks like a circular asymptote to me. He mentions how it "turns in on itself", which I guess is where I loose him. What does he mean?
In another section he talks about spherical geometry. For that he used the planet as an example, and how sailors and pilots use spherical geometry to plot shortest routes, etc... That one was easy enough. I just thought of a euclidian triangle molded to the planet, like the curved triangle that has the points NY, LA, and Miami. At least, I think I understand that part correctly.
It's easy for me to see the step from "flatland" to the third dimension, but I can't see it from the third to the fourth.
Here the author is talking about the Pseudosphere, which looks like a circular asymptote to me. He mentions how it "turns in on itself", which I guess is where I loose him. What does he mean?
In another section he talks about spherical geometry. For that he used the planet as an example, and how sailors and pilots use spherical geometry to plot shortest routes, etc... That one was easy enough. I just thought of a euclidian triangle molded to the planet, like the curved triangle that has the points NY, LA, and Miami. At least, I think I understand that part correctly.