File :-(, x, )
Anonymous
>>2 lolwut?
>> Anonymous
Just an Hypercube and ?
>> Anonymous
>>1155436
yeah, ive got like four of them in my garage
>> Anonymous
OMG Tesseract~
>> Anonymous
>>1155460

lol, hobo. I have like 8999.
>> Anonymous
I have 6+4i of them in my complex cupboard in my attic.
>> Anonymous
it's an anthem in a vacuum in a HYPERCUBE
>> anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>> Anonymous
"I have 6+4i of them in my complex cupboard in my attic"

dynamite math joke. most plebeians wouldn't get that
>> Haruko Full - Straight from Empornium Anonymous
>>1155552
Some water just shot through my nose.
Well done.
>> Anonymous
>>1156237

Are there more layers to it that I'm missing?
>> Anonymous
>>1155890
WHAT IS IT!?
>> Anonymous
It's a Hypercube, a projection of a 4-d Cube in 3-D space.
>> Anonymous
>>1156237
.... dynamite?
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>1155250
Mine's bigger.
>> Anonymous
>>1156485
yours goes through itself though. it cant work. meaning all though yours is bigger, its a strap on.
>> Anonymous
>>1156497

Well put
>> Trevor !!qsVpFXaydzm
>>1156497
Any item that is more than 3 dimensional appears to go through itself when viewed in any dimension less than its own.
>> Anonymous
4th dimension is space? OR am I on the wrong mathematic mindset
>> Anonymous
wtf is so amaing?
>> Anonymous
>>1156608
4th dimension is normally accepted to be time, I believe.

Space is already 3 dimensions.
>> Anonymous
www.tenthdimension.com
>> Anonymous
>>1156626

Actually, your wrong. The fourth dimension being 'time' has been popularised by science fiction and the scientific community are still out on this one. Another viable theory is that the fourth dimension is a spacial dimension; the movie Cube2 has its plot device entirely based on the theory of a "Hyper Cube."

The Hypercube is a set of different realities - a 'multi-verse' if you will. There is an increasing movement of thought in the scientific community towards the existence of a multi-verse, consisting of an infinite number of individual universes.
>> Anonymous
There are 11 dimensions if you chose the 4th one to be time. This is a spring-theory convention.
>> Anonymous
>>1156680

Yes, there are a lot of theories in this department of science and no solid facts to prove any of them. The only wrong answer is to say that one of the theories isn't possible.
>> Anonymous
HYYYPERCUBE!
>> Anonymous
>>1156680
Autumn theory has more credit.
>> Anonymous
>>1156659
Check out what a Minkowski space is. In the field of special relativity, people use four vectors to describe events, and that includes a time like dimension. That's what that whole space-time crap is about. For what it's worth, it describes the universe pretty accurately.
>> Anonymous
why stop at 11? Let's make every damn thing a dimension