Skip to main content

trans dimensional scissoring 

the act of opening a portal to another dimension by scissoring yourself.
the kid in our math class was "trans dimensional scissoring" himself during class.

N-Dimensional Sciences

The observational and experimental study of phenomena that provide evidence for, or are best explained by, extra dimensions. This could involve hunting for particles that "leak" into our dimension (like Kaluza-Klein particles), analyzing cosmic microwave background data for imprints of brane collisions, or conducting consciousness experiments to see if mental states can access higher-dimensional information. It's the search for the fingerprints of the hyper-universe in our flatland reality.
*Example: "Her team in N-Dimensional Sciences doesn't use telescopes; they use quantum entangled crystals in perfect vacuum chambers. They're looking for spontaneous, correlated vibrations that can't be explained by 3D physics—potential 'echoes' of particles vibrating in a tiny, curled-up 7th dimension we can't otherwise see."
N-Dimensional Sciences by Abzugal January 30, 2026

N-Dimensional Sociology

The specific analysis of group dynamics in higher-dimensional spaces, where concepts like "standing in a circle" or "forming a line" would be replaced by geometries we can't imagine. How would a 4D crowd behave at a concert? What would a 5D protest look like? How would 11D beings form cliques? N-dimensional sociology suggests that whatever the geometry, beings will find ways to exclude each other, form hierarchies, and argue about who gets to be in the center—even if "center" is a concept that requires redefinition.
N-Dimensional Sociology*Example: "In his N-dimensional sociology class, the professor asked students to imagine how gossip might spread in a 6D social network. One student suggested it would propagate along hyper-edges that 3D beings couldn't trace, making it impossible to know who started the rumor. The professor said that sounded exactly like regular high school and moved on."*
N-Dimensional Sociology by Nammugal February 14, 2026

N-Dimensional Social Sciences

The study of how societies might organize themselves if they existed in higher-dimensional spaces, where proximity, communication, and social hierarchy would work very differently. In a 4D society, you could be neighbors with someone who is also three miles away in 3D space. In a 5D society, social networks might form along axes we can't perceive, leading to alliances based on... we have no idea. N-dimensional social sciences are purely speculative, which makes them popular among science fiction writers and completely useless to actual sociologists.
*Example: "A paper in N-dimensional social sciences hypothesized that in a 4D society, class structure would be based on access to the fourth axis, with the 'hyper-rich' living in neighborhoods the 3D poor couldn't even perceive. The reviewers called it 'imaginative but unfalsifiable,' which is academic for 'cool story bro.'"*

N-Dimensional Sciences

The mathematical study of spaces with more than the three spatial dimensions we're stuck with, where "N" can be any number and "comprehensible" is not. It's the field that lets physicists describe the universe using 11 dimensions and then shrug when asked what they look like. N-dimensional sciences are great for string theory and terrible for interior design, as you can never find a couch that fits in a 5-dimensional living room. The main challenge is that our 3D brains keep trying to visualize things that are fundamentally un-visualizable, resulting in headaches and beautiful abstract art.
N-Dimensional Sciences*Example: "He was brilliant at N-dimensional sciences, able to manipulate equations in 26-dimensional space without breaking a sweat. He could not, however, visualize a 4-dimensional cube, which he described as 'like a cube, but more... you know... 4-ish.' His students did not know."*
N-Dimensional Sciences by Nammugal February 14, 2026

N-Dimensional Spacetime Theory

A theoretical framework extending general relativity and cosmology by proposing that spacetime has more than the familiar three spatial and one temporal dimension—potentially 5, 10, or 26 dimensions, depending on the model. These extra dimensions may be compactified (curled up at microscopic scales) or large but hidden, explaining why we don’t perceive them in everyday life. The theory is central to string theory and M‑theory, where additional dimensions allow the unification of gravity with quantum mechanics. It also has implications for cosmology (why the universe expands), particle physics (why masses have specific values), and speculative possibilities like wormholes or time travel.
N-Dimensional Spacetime Theory Example: “N‑dimensional spacetime theory explains why gravity seems weak compared to other forces—it spreads across extra dimensions, appearing diluted in our 4D slice.”