Return-Path: <@segate.sunet.se:LOJBAN%CUVMB.BITNET@BITMAIL.LSOFT.COM> Received: from segate.sunet.se by xiron.pc.helsinki.fi with smtp (Linux Smail3.1.28.1 #1) id m0sxlNm-0000ZOC; Wed, 27 Sep 95 03:33 EET Message-Id: Received: from listmail.sunet.se by segate.sunet.se (LSMTP for OpenVMS v0.1a) with SMTP id 2895B424 ; Wed, 27 Sep 1995 2:33:57 +0200 Date: Tue, 26 Sep 1995 21:32:37 EDT Reply-To: jorge@PHYAST.PITT.EDU Sender: Lojban list From: jorge@PHYAST.PITT.EDU Subject: Re: direction, dimension & Re: {soi} To: lojban@cuvmb.cc.columbia.edu Content-Length: 1448 Lines: 32 And: > > > That's right. But the sagging can be in one or both dimensions. The > > > shape of the sag can be like half a sphere or it can be like half > > > a cylinder. (I don't see that it depends on the object's symmetry; > > > a square of corrugated cardboard would tend to sag "hemicylindrically".) > > Yes, so does a sheet of paper, but the axis of the cylinder can be > > any direction along the plane, if only one at a time. Which direction > > is the sheet of paper tinsa in? > Away from the plane defined by the paper's two principal dimensions. So you agree that the direction place is redundant, since there is always only one direction in which it can be tinsa, whether the object be of spherical or cylindrical sag? > I think we have two senses > of dimension: (1) pertaining to the space within which the shape of x > is defined; A one dimensional object can have a shape in a three dimensional space (a helix for instance), but I understand what you mean. > (2) "axis". A person has 3 "axes"; a ball has none. Both > are 3-dimensional. How can you tell? A person has an up-down dimension thanks to gravity, a front-back one thanks to movement, and a left-right one by virtue of having the other two. But from a purely geometrical point of view, the only interesting thing about a person is one plane of approximate symmetry. Is this "axis" concept purely geometrical, or does it involve things like gravity and movement? Jorge