Article ID: CBB001550339

The Discreet Charm of Abstraction: Hyperspace Worlds and Victorian Geometry (2014)

unapi

Kreisel, Deanna K. (Author)


Victorian Studies
Volume: 56, no. 3
Issue: 3
Pages: 398-410

Analytic or Cartesian-coordinate geometry, which describes space in terms of algebraic equations, was conceived by most Victorians as a translation of the “real-world” truths of Euclidean geometry. However, other commentators were concerned that once Euclid's axioms were translated into a purely symbolic system, there would be no guarantee that that system corresponded to reality. The epistemological crisis intensified with mathematical advances in the later decades of the century, as algebraic equations began to yield problems that seemed to require additional spatial dimensions for their resolution. Charles Howard Hinton, an important popularizer of hyperspace philosophy, argued that imperceptible higher-dimensional worlds must actually exist, since they are conceivable mathematically. The algebraic system is no longer merely meant to represent an a priori truth (of Euclidean space); it also reveals something about that space that is not accessible through perceptual means. This paper examines the anxiety attendant upon the threat of an abstract hyperreal in the work of three imaginative hyperspace writers: Gustav Theodor Fechner, Charles Hinton, and H. G. Wells.

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Authors & Contributors
Page, Michael R.
Tattersdill, Will
Carlo Paghetti
Casolo, Carlo
Moretti, Alessio
Choo, Jae-uk
Journals
Science-Fiction Studies
Public Understanding of Science
Journal of the History of Ideas
Journal of the History of Biology
History and Philosophy of Logic
British Journal for the History of Science
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Northeastern University
Indiana University of Pennsylvania
UTET
University of Pennsylvania Press
Concepts
Science and literature
Science fiction
Evolution
Science and culture
Darwinism
Space
People
Wells, Herbert George
Stevenson, Robert Louis
Darwin, Charles Robert
Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft
Shaw, George Bernard
Darwin, Erasmus
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
20th century
18th century
Modern
Places
Great Britain
United Kingdom
Europe
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