The Global Spiral  is an e-publication of Metanexus Institute. Through articles, essays, book reviews, and news, the Global Spiral  explores humanity's most profound questions and challenges.
Email



If you enjoy this article, consider making an online donation to support the Global Spiral.
View / Add Comments (0) | Printer-Friendly | Email This Article


Pickover Surfs Hyperspace

Meta 134. 1999/08/24. Approximately 849 words.

Below is an announcement about Clifford Pickover's latest book entitled SURFING THROUGH HYPERSPACE UNDERSTANDING HIGHER UNIVERSES IN SIX EASY LESSONS. The book is on the spirituality of higher dimensions, such as the fourth dimension. Among other things, he discusses the possibility of God hovering in the fourth dimension, only inches away from us.

You will recall that the hyper-kinetic Pickover was a guest on Meta this past spring in an extended thread entitled "The Loom of God" which dealt with mathematics and mysticism. Pickover is a research scientist at the IBM Watson Research Center, Yorktown Hts, NY. A visit to his webpage is an opportunity to hallucinate on fractals and colorful two dimensional renderings of hypothetical four dimensional beings<http://www.pickover.com>. The thread with Pickover on Meta can be read at<http://www.meta-list.org>.

-- Billy Grassie

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

SURFING THROUGH HYPERSPACE UNDERSTANDING HIGHER UNIVERSES IN SIX EASY LESSONS (Oxford University Press, Fall 1999)

Table of Contents

Introduction Chapter 1. Degrees of Freedom Chapter 2. The Divinity of Higher Dimensions Chapter 3. Satan and Perpendicular Worlds Chapter 4. Hyperspheres and Tesseracts Chapter 5. Mirror Worlds Chapter 6. The Gods of Hyperspace Concluding Remarks Appendix I. Mind-Bending Four-Dimensional Puzzles Appendix II. Higher Dimensions in Science Fiction Appendix III. Banchoff Klein Bottle Appendix IV. Quaternions Appendix V. Four-Dimensional Mazes Appendix VI. Smorgasbord for Computer Junkies Appendix VII. Evolution of Four-Dimensional Beings Appendix VIII. Questions for Further Thought Appendix IX. Hyperspace Titles

I know of no subject in mathematics that has intrigued both children and adults as much as the idea of a fourth dimension -- a spatial direction different from all the directions of our normal three-dimensional space. Philosophers and parapsychologists have meditated upon this dimension that no one can point to but may be all around us. Theologians have speculated that the afterlife, heaven, hell, angels, and our souls could reside in a fourth dimension -- that God and Satan could literally be lumps of hypermatter in a four- dimensional space inches away from our ordinary three-dimensional world. Throughout time, various mystics and prophets have likened our world to a three-dimensional cage and have speculated on how great our perceptions would be if we could break from the confines of our world into higher dimensions. Yet, despite all the philosophical and spiritual implications of the fourth dimension, this extra dimension also has a very practical side. Mathematicians and physicists use the fourth dimension every day in calculations. It's part of important theories that describe the very fabric of our universe.

ADVANCE PRAISE:

"I can't imagine anybody whose mind won't be stretched by this book -- but I only hope it isn't responsible for an outbreak of mysterious disappearances."

- ARTHUR C. CLARKE

"Pickover just seems to exist in more dimensions than the rest of us."

- Ian Stewart, Mathematics Awareness Center, University of Warwick

"Cliff Pickover's new book is a perfect reflection of its author's imagination, an imagination so vast it MUST be hyperspacial itself! Three dimensions are simply not sufficient to explain Pickover's astounding breadth of knowledge on such arcane matters as spacetime wormholes, random walks, and the enormous science fiction literature dealing with the higher dimensions. The book is not loaded with mathematics (that's a plus!), but even the purest of mathematicians will find the ideas in it deep, and Pickover's discussions of them stimulating."

- Professor Paul J. Nahin, author of Time Machines

"Whimsical, delightful, and always fun, Surfing through Hyperspace will tickle the imagination and boggle the mind. Hyperspace is where physics, mathematics, and science fiction collide. Pickover is our mischievous tour guide for the bizarre realm of higher dimensions, where common sense becomes obsolete. Surfing through Hyperspace teases us to imagine the unimaginable."

- Dr. Michio Kaku, author of Hyperspace

"There is no more difficult topic for the human mind to grasp than spatial dimensions beyond three. In this book, Clifford Pickover weaves a science fiction tale with embedded mathematical analysis that explains the fourth dimension in a unique and amusing way. The approach works well in a manner reminiscent of the classic work, Flatland, by Edwin Abbott."

- Charles Ashbacher, Editor, Journal of Recreational Mathematics

Publisher's Weekly:

Prolific Discover magazine columnist Pickover (Time: A Traveler's Guide) alternates expositions of math, physics and geometry with episodes of instructional science fiction while showing interested amateurs the mathematical and physical properties of higher spatial dimensions.

Familiar analogies from Edwin Abbott's classic Flatland link up with odder ones from Baha'i and Christian scriptures, The X-Files, and the superstring theories of modern cosmologists, as Pickover explains how to trap a 4-D organism or why one twirl through a fourth dimension could turn you into your mirror image. Pickover's usual whimsy is in full force here as he focuses on what four-dimensional organisms could (or do) look like to us: 4-D lifeforms, he explains, could make any 3-D object vanish (or reappear) by lifting it out of (or dropping it back into) our 3-D space. And 4-D creatures with anatomies analogous to ours would probably look, from our limited perspective, like sets of floating, unconnected flesh blobs.

- Publisher's Weekly, August 1999

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
This publication is hosted by Metanexus Online http://www.metanexus.net. The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of Metanexus or its sponsors.

Metanexus welcomes submissions between 1000 to 3000 words of essays and book reviews that seek to explore and interpret science and religion in original and insightful ways for a general educated audience. Previous columns give a good indication of the topical range and tone for acceptable essays. Please send all inquiries and submissions to . Metanexus consists of a number of topically focused forums (Anthropos, Bios, Cogito, Cosmos, Salus, Sophia, and Techne) and periodic HTML enriched composite digests from each of the lists.

Copyright notice: Except when otherwise noted, articles may be forwarded, quoted, or republished in full with attribution to the author of the column and "Metanexus: The Online Forum on Religion and Science ". Republication for commercial purposes in print or electronic format requires the permission of the author. Copyright 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 by Metanexus Institute.

Did you enjoy this article? ... Your donation is tax-deductible to the fullest extent of the law.

Separater


Published   1999.08.24
Comments: Share your thoughts on this article:
View / Add Comments (0)
Printer-Friendly | Email This Article


©1997-2008 Metanexus Institute
www.metanexus.net
Spirital Capital
Templeton Advanced Research Program
Spiritual Transformation Scientific Research Program
Metanexus Global Network Initiative
TRL