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Chapter 5 The Cubic (Three-dimensional) space Our ‘space’ which we believe it is cubic (three-dimensional) is actually a square (two-dimensional) plane. It is because ‘spaces’ in all existence are disk-type and they make only two-dimensional motion. It is two-dimensional plane motion: circular motion and angular motion. It means that two-dimensional plane ‘space’ is nothing but motion ‘space’ and image ‘space’. Substance ‘space’ is static ‘space’ and also one-dimensional line ‘space’. Then, what is cubic (three-dimensional) space we can obviously see? Our body is surely cubic (three-dimensional.) Others’ bodies are surely cubic (three-dimensional.) The scenery we are looking at is surely cubic (three-dimensional.) The fact that we can see means that we receive the outward appearance through the five senses: to see, to hear, to smell, to taste and to touch and another organs have nothing to do with outward appearance at all. In other words, cubic (three-dimensional) space is the outward appearance to sense through five senses. Five senses simply feel cubic (three-dimensional) space. Bodies are just making two-dimensional motion. That is to say, cubic (three-dimensional) space is a view of part, a square (two-dimensional) plane is a view of whole; both are images. An image on the screen of a cubic (three-dimensional) TV is the world five senses feel, an image on the screen of a square (two-dimensional) TV is the world bodies feel and a line (one-dimensional) is the static actual world. Cubic (three-dimensional) space is a partial view of square (two-dimensional) motion ‘space’. |