Four-Dimensional Vistas by Claude Fayette Bragdon
page 37 of 116 (31%)
page 37 of 116 (31%)
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the unsensed higher region encompassing a world of two dimensions,
To a hypothetical flat-man of a two-space, any portion of his plane surrounded by an unbroken line would constitute an enclosure. Were he confined within it, escape would be impossible by any means known to him. Had he the ability to move in the third dimension, however, he could rise, pass over the enclosing line without disturbing it, and descend on the other side. The moment he forsook the plane he would disappear from two-dimensional space. Such a disappearance would constitute an occult phenomenon in a world of two dimensions. Correspondingly, an evanishment from any three-dimensional enclosure--such as a room with locked doors and windows--might be effected by means of a movement in the fourth dimension. Because a body would disappear from our perception the moment it forsook our space, such a disappearance would be a mystery; it would constitute an occult phenomenon. The thing would be no more mysterious, however, to a consciousness embracing four dimensions within its ken, than the transfer of an object from the inside to the outside of a plane figure without crossing its linear boundary is mysterious to us. POSSESSION _The temporary possession of a person's body, or some member of that body, by an alien will, as exemplified in automatic writing and obsession_. It would doubtless amaze the scientifically orthodox to know how many people habitually and successfully practice the dubious art of automatic writing--not mediums, so-called, but people of refinement |
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