Page:Popular Science Monthly Volume 69.djvu/407

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THE VALUE OF SCIENCE
407

another instead of encroaching on one another as do the elements of the physical continuum, in conformity with the preceding formula.

The physical continuum is, so to speak, a nebula not resolved; the most perfect instruments could not attain to its resolution. Doubtless if we measured the weights with a good balance instead of judging them by the hand, we could distinguish the weight of 11 grams from those of 10 and 12 grams, and our formula would become:

.

But we should always find between and and between and new elements and such that

and the difficulty would only have receded and the nebula would always remain unresolved; the mind alone can resolve it and the mathematical continuum it is which is the nebula resolved into stars.

Yet up to this point we have not introduced the notion of the number of dimensions. What is meant when we say that a mathematical continuum or that a physical continuum has two or three dimensions?

First we must introduce the notion of cut, studying first physical continua. We have seen what characterizes the physical continuum. Each of the elements of this continuum consists of a manifold of impressions; and it may happen either that an element can not be discriminated from another element of the same continuum, if this new element corresponds to a manifold of impressions not sufficiently different, or, on the contrary, that the discrimination is possible; finally it may happen that two elements indistinguishable from a third, may, nevertheless, be distinguished one from the other.

That postulated, if and are two distinguishable elements of a continuum a series of elements may be found, , , ⋅⋅⋅, , all belonging to this same continuum and such that each of them is indistinguishable from the preceding, that is indistinguishable from and n indistinguishable from Therefore we can go from to by a continuous route and without quitting If this condition is fulfilled for any two elements and of the continuum we may say that this continuum is all in one piece. Now let us distinguish certain of the elements of which may either be all distinguishable from one another, or themselves form one or several continua. The assemblage of the elements thus chosen arbitrarily among all those of will form what I shall call the cut or the cuts.

Take on any two elements and Either we can also find a series of elements , , ⋅⋅⋅, , such: (1) that they all belong to (2) that each of them is indistinguishable from the following, indistinguishable from and from (3) and besides that none