Description
sources:
Books: Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions by Edwin A. Abbott, https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/201
The Cosmic Landscape by Leonard Susskind,https://books.google.com.ua/books/about/The_Cosmic_Landscape.html?id=f7mklwEACAAJ&redir_esc=y
and The Elegant Universe by Brian Greene https://www.hlevkin.com/hlevkin/90MathPhysBioBooks/Physics/QED/Greene%20The%20Elegant%20Universe.pdf
Scientific papers: Paul Ehrenfest's paper ("In what way does it become manifest in the fundamental laws of physics that space has three dimensions?") on the impossibility of orbits in 4D
https://www.scirp.org/reference/referencespapers?referenceid=1153795
and Hugh Everett's dissertation ("'Relative State' Formulation of Quantum Mechanics") on the many-worlds interpretation https://journals.aps.org/rmp/abstract/10.1103/RevModPhys.29.454
Historical lectures : Hermann Minkowski's lecture on spacetime ("Space and Time" / "Raum und Zeit") https://mathweb.ucsd.edu/~b3tran/cgm/Minkowski_SpaceAndTime_1909.pdf
Academic encyclopedias: Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy https://plato.stanford.edu
What would happen if a human body was dragged through the 0th, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, and 7th dimensions? In this science documentary, we explore dimensions explained visually - from a mathematical point with no size, to a one-dimensional line, a flat 2D world, our 3D illusion of depth, 4D spacetime, the block universe, branching timelines, many-worlds theory, and the idea of all possible realities. Using physics, geometry, Flatland-style thought experiments, coordinate systems, perception, time, and higher-dimensional metaphors, this video shows why our universe may be far stranger than it appears - and why the human brain struggles to imagine dimensions beyond the world we can see.