FROM C. J. MONRO, Esq.
Hadley, Barnet, 10th September 1871.
. . . Of your
own things, the
Classification
of Quantities and the Hills and Dales, are all I have read to
much
purpose. Nor them either, you may say, if I go on to ask why you say
that
"in the pure theory of surfaces there is no
method
of determining a line of water-shed or ater-course, except as therein
is
excepted, that is in page 6? Why does not this
determine
them? to wit—
Or if this
does determine
them, how does it
resolve itself into "first finding," etc.?
I am glad you
like Strutt on
sky-blue. You
see he sees his way now to a new theory of double refraction.
Looking
at your old letter again, I don't quite see the force of either of your
objections to space of more than three dimensions.
First,
you ask if we can think some of the dimensions and not others, then
which?
Surely one might answer, that depends—depends namely
on your circumstances—on circumstances which in your
circumstances
you cannot expect to judge of.
"I can easily
believe," as
Darwin would say,
that before we were tidal ascidians we were a slimy sheet of
cells
floating on the surface of the sea. Well, in those days, the missing
dimension,
and the two forthcoming ones respectively, kept changing with the
rotation of the earth,—we now know how, but could not guess then.
So,
now, the missing dimension or dimensions, if any, might be determined
by
circumstances which we could not tell unless we knew all
about
the said dimension or dimensions.