We are One Dimensional Beings — Here is Why
Sorry To Burst Your Bubble but I Can Prove it To You
The topic of dimensions seems too complicated, but it shouldn’t be. Let’s first define dimensions and a being.
What is the dimension?
Dimensions are the measurable extent of a kind. That means length, width and depth are dimensions. Any object with three measurements is considered to be a 3-dimensional object. Time is considered to be the fourth dimension because it includes these 3-dimensional objects and the movement or changes of these objects.
We experience universe and the natural world in a cyclic manners, the seasons of the year, days and night. Dimensions…medium.com
What is a being?
Being means existing. It is also the essence of a person. Possessing a human body is also a form of beingness.
I’ve seen a lot of people talking about transcending into the 5th dimension, 7th dimension, and even the 12th dimension. This is another topic, but the misunderstanding is that we are 3-dimensional beings that have yet to evolve into 4 and 5-dimensional beings.
Thinking about it, we are barely a 2-dimensional being, let alone a 3-dimensional one.
How do we determine our level of existence?
We determine our level of existence based on our level of experience, how we collect information from our environment using our five senses, and how we interpret that information.
2-Dimensional vision
Despite our belief that we can perceive the depth of space, we are not capable of seeing 3 dimensions. In other words, just because an image represents a 3-dimensional object does not mean it is a 3-dimensional object. This is exactly what happens to our vision, we perceive 3-dimensions in 2 dimensions. In reality, our iris only captures images of our environment in 2-D representations of 3-D objects. This is because of the perspective that gives us a sense of distance. Our lenses are convex which allows us to see a broader landscape.
So in reality things do not become smaller with distance, but it is the lens of our eyes that makes them appear smaller. If we were capable of seeing items in their 3-dimensional form, we would be able to see both of their sides, something that we don’t
2 -dimensional sound.
One day, I was searching for 3-dimensional sound, only to discover that it was a 2-dimensional sound projected into 3-dimensional space, not 3-dimensional sound as it had been represented. Our ears cannot hear the three-dimensional sound, since water itself cannot vibrate in three dimensions. As you need the third vector. Take a string, for example. If a string vibrates only one dimension at a time, it can either be sideways or up and down. Our eardrums can only respond to waves that push them back and forth or the internal of the drum itself.
That is to say, three-dimensional sound waves are reduced to two-dimensional waves in order for someone’s eardrum to detect them. If one could hear three-dimensional sound waves that means the changes in pressure of the atmosphere would be heard because it takes three independent coordinates for an individual to hear 3-dimensional sounds.
Why are we 1-dimensional beings?
Let’s take a look at the water. When you look at the three phases of water, you will understand what I am trying to explain here. Water has a solid-state, liquid-state, and vapor state. These phases, however, are a representation of dimensions if we examine them closely. In the solid-state, a block of ice can only be on one coordinate at a time. This is even if it is moving. It will only move on one coordinate at a time. I know it is a three-dimensional object, but looking at its movement properties it can only occupy one coordinate at a time.
Due to the fact that water flows, on a sphere, the liquid can flow in both directions on the surface at once, unlike an ice cube, which can only flow along one or more of the z-axis, y-axis, or x-axis. But fluid can move on the x and y-axis at the same time. Got it?
Okay, now let’s go to vapor. What vapor does is it can move spatially, it can move independently along the x, z, and y-axis at the same time, therefore it moves in 3-dimensional space, unlike the first three phases of water.
Guess what? We are physical beings, we can only occupy one coordinate of space at a time, that means if you climb the ladder you can only move along the y axis, if you move back and forth you are only moving along the z-axis, and when you move sideways you are moving along the z-axis. This is not a three-dimensional being, this is a one-dimensional being. Even our senses do not perceive three dimensions.
If we were made up of vapor then we would be three-dimensional beings that are capable of feeling objects from inside out, we would be able to see things in all directions at once.
Imagine being able to enter into another person, and feel their internal organs, feel their temperature, their density and all the cavities within their bodies. This is a three dimensional being, so when someone says we are 3 dimensional beings, I really can’t fathom what they are referring to.
We are One Dimensional Beings — Here is Why
Sorry To Burst Your Bubble but I Can Prove it To You
The topic of dimensions seems too complicated, but it shouldn’t be. Let’s first define dimensions and a being.
What is the dimension?
Dimensions are the measurable extent of a kind. That means length, width and depth are dimensions. Any object with three measurements is considered to be a 3-dimensional object. Time is considered to be the fourth dimension because it includes these 3-dimensional objects and the movement or changes of these objects.
We experience universe and the natural world in a cyclic manners, the seasons of the year, days and night. Dimensions…medium.com
What is a being?
Being means existing. It is also the essence of a person. Possessing a human body is also a form of beingness.
I’ve seen a lot of people talking about transcending into the 5th dimension, 7th dimension, and even the 12th dimension. This is another topic, but the misunderstanding is that we are 3-dimensional beings that have yet to evolve into 4 and 5-dimensional beings.
Thinking about it, we are barely a 2-dimensional being, let alone a 3-dimensional one.
How do we determine our level of existence?
We determine our level of existence based on our level of experience, how we collect information from our environment using our five senses, and how we interpret that information.
2-Dimensional vision
Despite our belief that we can perceive the depth of space, we are not capable of seeing 3 dimensions. In other words, just because an image represents a 3-dimensional object does not mean it is a 3-dimensional object. This is exactly what happens to our vision, we perceive 3-dimensions in 2 dimensions. In reality, our iris only captures images of our environment in 2-D representations of 3-D objects. This is because of the perspective that gives us a sense of distance. Our lenses are convex which allows us to see a broader landscape.
So in reality things do not become smaller with distance, but it is the lens of our eyes that makes them appear smaller. If we were capable of seeing items in their 3-dimensional form, we would be able to see both of their sides, something that we don’t
2 -dimensional sound.
One day, I was searching for 3-dimensional sound, only to discover that it was a 2-dimensional sound projected into 3-dimensional space, not 3-dimensional sound as it had been represented. Our ears cannot hear the three-dimensional sound, since water itself cannot vibrate in three dimensions. As you need the third vector. Take a string, for example. If a string vibrates only one dimension at a time, it can either be sideways or up and down. Our eardrums can only respond to waves that push them back and forth or the internal of the drum itself.
That is to say, three-dimensional sound waves are reduced to two-dimensional waves in order for someone’s eardrum to detect them. If one could hear three-dimensional sound waves that means the changes in pressure of the atmosphere would be heard because it takes three independent coordinates for an individual to hear 3-dimensional sounds.
Why are we 1-dimensional beings?
Let’s take a look at the water. When you look at the three phases of water, you will understand what I am trying to explain here. Water has a solid-state, liquid-state, and vapor state. These phases, however, are a representation of dimensions if we examine them closely. In the solid-state, a block of ice can only be on one coordinate at a time. This is even if it is moving. It will only move on one coordinate at a time. I know it is a three-dimensional object, but looking at its movement properties it can only occupy one coordinate at a time.
Due to the fact that water flows, on a sphere, the liquid can flow in both directions on the surface at once, unlike an ice cube, which can only flow along one or more of the z-axis, y-axis, or x-axis. But fluid can move on the x and y-axis at the same time. Got it?
Okay, now let’s go to vapor. What vapor does is it can move spatially, it can move independently along the x, z, and y-axis at the same time, therefore it moves in 3-dimensional space, unlike the first three phases of water.
Guess what? We are physical beings, we can only occupy one coordinate of space at a time, that means if you climb the ladder you can only move along the y axis, if you move back and forth you are only moving along the z-axis, and when you move sideways you are moving along the z-axis. This is not a three-dimensional being, this is a one-dimensional being. Even our senses do not perceive three dimensions.
If we were made up of vapor then we would be three-dimensional beings that are capable of feeling objects from inside out, we would be able to see things in all directions at once.
Imagine being able to enter into another person, and feel their internal organs, feel their temperature, their density and all the cavities within their bodies. This is a three dimensional being, so when someone says we are 3 dimensional beings, I really can’t fathom what they are referring to.

Leave a Reply