Is information lost when going from the fourth dimension to the third dimension? — Wallows
In 1878, Cantor submitted another paper to Crelle's Journal, in which he defined precisely the concept of a 1-to-1 correspondence and introduced the notion of "power" (a term he took from Jakob Steiner) or "equivalence" of sets: two sets are equivalent (have the same power) if there exists a 1-to-1 correspondence between them. Cantor defined countable sets (or denumerable sets) as sets which can be put into a 1-to-1 correspondence with the natural numbers, and proved that the rational numbers are denumerable. He also proved that n-dimensional Euclidean space Rn has the same power as the real numbers R, as does a countably infinite product of copies of R. — Wiki
Since this would only be a mathematical game, the only answer that would make sense would be based on how we're setting up the rules of the mathematical game we're playing. — Terrapin Station
So, information is not lost when going to a lower dimension? But, then how can "time" exist in 3-dimensions? — Wallows
It depends on what you mean by describe. — andrewk
It is a proven theorem of topology that the answer to that is NO. — andrewk
What do you mean? Trying to figure out what... — Wallows
Dimensionality other than three dimensions (plus time if you want to consider that a dimension) isn't real. It's just a mathematical game that we can play. — Terrapin Station
Huh? — Terrapin Station
Let' say for the sake of argument that we live in 4-dimensions.
Now, we want to go to 3-dimensions to describe something.
Is information lost when going from the fourth dimension to the third dimension? — Wallows
In a side-by-side comparison under optimal conditions, a holographic image is visually indistinguishable from the actual subject. A microscopic level of detail throughout the recorded volume of space can be reproduced. — Holography - Wikipedia
In the case of a black hole, the insight was that the informational content of all the objects that have fallen into the hole might be entirely contained in surface fluctuations of the event horizon. — Holographic principle - Wikipedia
Aren't natural languages invented too?Mathematics is an invented language, initially based on how we think about relations, and then the bulk of it is akin to extrapolating how we think about relations into abstract "game" of sorts. — Terrapin Station
Aren't natural languages invented too? — ssu
Is information lost when going from the fourth dimension to the third dimension? — Wallows
I'm basically asking if you can describe n dimensions in n-1 dimensions. Does this apply from going from n to n-k dimensions also or is 1 to 1 correspondence only applicable/maintained for/to a single lower dimension? — Wallows
Is information lost when going from the fourth dimension to the third dimension? — Wallows
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