The fourth dimension
THE FOURTH DIMENSION
CHAPTER I FOUR-DIMENSIONAL SPACE
TERE is nothing more indefinite, and at the same time more real, than that which we indicate when we speak of the “higher.” In our social life we see it evidenced in a greater complexity of relations. But this complexity is not all. There is, at the same time, a contact with, an apprehension of, something more fundamental, more real.
With the greater development of man there comes a consciousness of something more than all the forms in which it shows itself. There is a readiness to give up all the visible and tangible for the sake of those principles and values of which the visible and tangible are the representation. The physical life of civilised man and of a mere sayage are practically the same, but the civilised man has discovered a depth in his existence, which makes him feel that that which appears all to the savage isa mere externality and appurtenage to his true being.
Now, this higher—how shall we apprehend it? It is generally embraced by our religious faculties, by our idealising tendency. But the higher existence has two sides. It has a being as well as qualities. And in trying
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