So all that we could see or touch of a higher solid would be that part by which it stood on the æther; and this part would be to us exactly like any ordinary solid body. The base of a cube would be to the plane-being like a square which is to him an ordinary solid.
Now, the two ways, in which a plane-being would apprehend a solid body, would be by the successive appearances to him of it as it passed through his plane; and also by the different views of one and the same solid body which he got by turning the body over, so that different parts of its surface come into contact with his plane.
And the practical work of learning to think in four-dimensional space, is to go through the appearances which one and the same higher solid has.
Often, in the course of investigation in nature, we come across objects which have a certain similarity, and yet which are in parts entirely different. The work of the mind consists in forming an idea of that whole in which they cohere, and of which they are simple presentations.
The work of forming an idea of a higher solid is the most simple and most definite of all such mental operations.
If we imagine a plane world in which there are objects which correspond to our sun, to the planets, and, in fact, to all our visible universe, we must suppose a surface of enormous extent on which great disks slide, these disks being worlds of various orders of magnitude.
These disks would some of them be central, and hot, like our sun; round them would circulate other disks, like our planets.
And the systems of sun and planets must be conceived as moving with great velocity over the surface which bears them all.
And the movements of the atoms of these worlds will be the course of events in such worlds. As the atoms weave together, and form bodies altering, becoming, and ceasing, so will bodies be formed and disappear.
And the plane which bears them all on its smooth surface will simply be a support to all these movements, and influence them in no way.