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Architecture and Democracy by Claude Fayette Bragdon
page 58 of 130 (44%)
these fascinating halls of thought in order to reap the advantage
which he seeks. Nevertheless an intention of mind upon this
"fairy-tale of mathematics" cannot fail to enlarge his intellectual
and spiritual horizons, and develop his imagination--that finest
instrument in all his chest of tools.

By way of introduction to the subject Prof. James Byrnie Shaw, in an
article in the _Scientific Monthly_, has this to say:

Up to the period of the Reformation algebraic equations of
more than the third degree were frowned upon as having no
real meaning, since there is no fourth power or dimension.
But about one hundred years ago this chimera became an actual
existence, and today it is furnishing a new world to physics,
in which mechanics may become geometry, time be co-ordinated
with space, and every geometric theorem in the world is a
physical theorem in the experimental world in study in the
laboratory. Startling indeed it is to the scientist to be told
that an artificial dream-world of the mathematician is
more real than that he sees with his galvanometers,
ultra-microscopes, and spectroscopes. It matters little that
he replies, "Your four-dimensional world is only an analytic
explanation of my phenomena," for the fact remains a fact,
that in the mathematician's four-dimensional space there is
a space not derived in any sense of the term as a residue of
experience, however powerful a distillation of sensations or
perceptions be resorted to, for it is not contained at all in
the fluid that experience furnishes. It is a product of the
creative power of the mathematical mind, and its objects are
real in exactly the same way that the cube, the square, the
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