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Topic: Past lives?
no photo
Tue 10/04/11 02:27 PM
But a one dimensional plane can be imagined.
No it cannot, the definition of a plane requires 2 dimensions.

In mathematics, a plane is any flat, two-dimensional surface. A plane is the two dimensional analogue of a point (zero-dimensions), a line (one-dimension) and a space (three-dimensions). ...



no photo
Tue 10/04/11 02:41 PM

But a one dimensional plane can be imagined.
No it cannot, the definition of a plane requires 2 dimensions.

In mathematics, a plane is any flat, two-dimensional surface. A plane is the two dimensional analogue of a point (zero-dimensions), a line (one-dimension) and a space (three-dimensions). ...





You're right. I stand corrected.

The one dimensional thing would be a point. :smile:

no photo
Tue 10/04/11 02:44 PM


But a one dimensional plane can be imagined.
No it cannot, the definition of a plane requires 2 dimensions.

In mathematics, a plane is any flat, two-dimensional surface. A plane is the two dimensional analogue of a point (zero-dimensions), a line (one-dimension) and a space (three-dimensions). ...





You're right. I stand corrected.

The one dimensional thing would be a point. :smile:
. . . a line, a point is 0 dimensions.

no photo
Tue 10/04/11 02:49 PM



But a one dimensional plane can be imagined.
No it cannot, the definition of a plane requires 2 dimensions.

In mathematics, a plane is any flat, two-dimensional surface. A plane is the two dimensional analogue of a point (zero-dimensions), a line (one-dimension) and a space (three-dimensions). ...





You're right. I stand corrected.

The one dimensional thing would be a point. :smile:
. . . a line, a point is 0 dimensions.


Yeh! Right! Infinity. Zero. Nada.

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