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The Planiverse : Computer Contact with a Two Dimensional World - A. K. Dewdney

The Planiverse

Computer Contact with a Two Dimensional World

By: A. K. Dewdney

Paperback | 11 May 1984

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A conscious tribute to, and modern reinterpretation of, Edwin Abbott's famous 19th-century fantasy Flatland: science fiction, cast as non-fiction, exploring a theoretically possible but again hard-to-visualize two-dimensional universe. The scenario begins when Dewdney (a real-life computer-science prof) and his students construct, for didactic purposes, a computer program, "2DWORLD," which attempts to simulate the characteristics of two-dimensional space - i.e., a place that has no thickness, like a mathematical circle. Presently they are surprised to discover an unprogrammed intruder, Yendred, a citizen of the "real" two-dimensional planet Arde - who resembles an intelligent four-armed hydra with, naturally, all his internal organs visible. So the story, such as it is, follows Yendred among his fellow-Ardeans as he travels from one side of Arde's only continent to the other in search of knowledge. Arde boasts many fantastic constructions - lifeforms, houses, boats, steam engines, computers - based on reputable research into the characteristics of two-dimensional atoms, gravity fields, electromagnetic waves, etc. And these phenomena, in turn, give rise to a number of fairly obvious philosophical questions. (E.g., are we being observed by imperceptible four-dimensional beings?) In all: an ingenious intellectual exercise - amusing, edifying, sometimes tedious - for those curious about the oddly circumscribed two-dimensional universe and its even odder mechanics. (Kirkus Reviews)