Diagram I.
It is evident that just as the particles are affected by the vibration and shaking of the sheet of metal on which we suppose them, so they might in turn possibly affect the sheet of metal and cause vibrations and shakings in it. These shakings and vibrations would go forth from a particle which excited them in every direction along the sheet. They would not pass out into the air, except secondarily and in a very minute degree. The shake would be transmitted in the sheet. And the effect on neighbouring particles would be great, on more distant particles it would be less, and on those at a great distance barely perceptible.
The following is a good plan for obtaining in a definite way the feeling of what existence in a plane would be like; it enables us to realize the conditions in such a way as to lay the basis for subsequent thought.
Let the reader take a sheet of note-paper and hold it before himself edgewise, so that he sees it with one eye as a single line. And let him hold it so that this line runs downwards from his eyebrows to his mouth, as shown in Diagram I. Now on this sheet of paper, on one side of it, let a straight line be drawn running across it, away from the observer. Suppose all below this line to be a thin layer of particles which, keeping compactly together, form a solid sheet of particles, every one of which touches the paper. This would be the solid earth to a being in the plane world.
Let the surface of the paper above this be covered by a layer of particles which move freely amongst each other, but which do not rise from the surface of the paper. These particles form the air of such a world.
On the surface of the earth draw a line standing upright. Let this line represent a man. Another line will represent a wall which the man could not pass except by getting over it.
It will be found that the objects on the paper are felt to be subject to the action of gravity. The question will occur, Why will not this thin layer of particles slip off the paper?
Now, the sense of gravity must not be got rid of, but it must be connected with the matter in the sheet of paper.
Suppose, then, that the sheet were to grow bigger and bigger till it filled out reaching through the whole world and cutting the globe in two. Then let all the earth be removed except a thin layer on one side of this enlarged sheet of paper. This thin layer will be the only portion of matter left. And such a thin layer will represent a plane world. The force of gravity must be conceived as remaining, but as coming from a large and thin disk.
Now to keep this thin layer on the paper it would be necessary to have some force acting sideways, so as to keep the particles to the paper.