^Good point. Ellison's work is more literary SF than hard SF.
And of course Einstein's General Relativity, published in 1916, incorporated the idea of a 4-dimensional spacetime.
Before that, Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity, published in 1905 in "On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies", incorporated the idea of a 4-dimensional spacetime.
And of course Einstein's General Relativity, published in 1916, incorporated the idea of a 4-dimensional spacetime.
Before that, Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity, published in 1905 in "On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies", incorporated the idea of a 4-dimensional spacetime.
I'm pretty sure that's false. Einstein's 1905 paper works with a traditional three dimensions of space and does not treat time as a fourth dimension. It was Minkowski in 1907 who proposed reinterpreting special relativity within a four dimensional metaphysic, according to which what we think of as three-dimensional objects are just instantaneous slices of four-dimensional objects. Einstein thereafter adopted Minkowski's 4D approach.
Before that, Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity, published in 1905 in "On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies", incorporated the idea of a 4-dimensional spacetime.
I'm pretty sure that's false. Einstein's 1905 paper works with a traditional three dimensions of space and does not treat time as a fourth dimension. It was Minkowski in 1907 who proposed reinterpreting special relativity within a four dimensional metaphysic, according to which what we think of as three-dimensional objects are just instantaneous slices of four-dimensional objects. Einstein thereafter adopted Minkowski's 4D approach.
You are right, I stand corrected. The formulation in the 1905 paper (translated here at http://www.fourmilab.ch/etexts/einstein/specrel/specrel.pdf) is mathematically equivalent to the revised version of special relativity Einstein later presented using Minkowski spacetime.
I think it's just meant to create the feeling of mystery and there being phenomenon that we are unable to understand. I mean, if people on an internet message board could explain to you how and why Spock was wrong (or not totally accurate) in his statement, then it should've been understandable enough for SPOCK to figure out in the first place!But surely the concept of other dimensions would't be beyond Spock's capability to understand, so unless the guardian underestimated him or enjoyed snark, it doesn't explain the comment.
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