204 Results in the "Science Fiction" category
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Section 7 reveals how deeply education in Flatland shapes not only personal success but societal structure. Advancement depends on passing the Final Test, and those from the Polygonal class often thrive, accelerating far beyond their Triangular classmates. In early stages, triangles and polygons may share the same curriculum, but over time, the Polygonal students display sharper insight and superior understanding. This distinction becomes clear as they enter professional life, where their education…
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92.9 K • Ongoing
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Section 6 delves into the unique way Flatlanders interpret visual information in a world limited by two dimensions. Sight recognition plays an essential role in the lives of the upper classes, particularly in areas where the natural presence of fog assists in the process. In these foggy regions, objects at various distances take on different degrees of dimness. This visual fading creates a gradient effect, allowing trained eyes to discern one shape from another. For instance, the angle of a triangle might…
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92.9 K • Ongoing
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Section 5 explores the rigid structure that defines a woman’s place in Flatland—a society where mobility, both social and intellectual, is essentially impossible for them. Women are shaped as mere lines, and this geometric limitation marks them as inherently inferior in the eyes of the system. Unlike other shapes that can evolve into higher forms, women remain fixed, both in form and fate. There is no educational path, no social strategy, and no merit-based system that can change their status. As a…
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Chapter
Section 4: Concerning the Women
Section 4 presents a disturbing view of societal control in Flatland, particularly how irregular or discontented citizens are dealt with by the ruling Circles. Those who do not meet the strict standards of shape may find themselves confined for life in state institutions under the pretense of rehabilitation. A few of the most rebellious or hopelessly flawed are executed without fanfare, considered a threat to the stability of the realm. To suppress unrest, especially among the Isosceles class, the…-
92.9 K • Ongoing
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Section 3 explores the social structure of Flatland through both its geometry and strict hierarchy. Buildings in populated areas must follow a legal standard that ensures safety by limiting sharp angles, with pentagonal forms being the lowest acceptable design. This reflects a broader cultural shift, where even architecture mirrors the drive toward symmetry and refinement. Only in remote, undeveloped regions might a square house still be found—an architectural relic seen more as a curiosity than a…
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Section 22 – Flatland reveals a deeply personal and philosophical crisis that unravels slowly within the mind of the narrator. As the realization of a Third Dimension settles into his consciousness, he struggles to share this vision with others who are confined to thinking only within their two-dimensional limitations. His initial excitement turns to despair as even his grandson—bright and inquisitive—dismisses his attempts at explanation. The rejection wounds more deeply because it comes from…
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Section 21 – Flatland begins with renewed hope that enlightenment might spring from youth, as the narrator reaches out to his Grandson, remembering the boy’s earlier comments about dimensions beyond two. Confident that this fresh mind could grasp what older ones could not, he attempts to explain the meaning of a third spatial direction—one that does not follow the cardinal plane but instead moves "upward." The theory, while simple enough in isolation, proves frustratingly difficult to communicate in…
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92.9 K • Ongoing
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Section 20 – Flatland opens with the narrator returning home, carrying the weight of experiences that he knows cannot be shared openly. Faced with his wife’s concern and her limited understanding of dimensions, he crafts a simple story involving a trapdoor to explain his disoriented state. Her unquestioning acceptance comforts him only slightly, as he begins to realize how lonely it feels to possess knowledge that others cannot grasp. The silence of night offers him refuge, and he retreats inward,…
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92.9 K • Ongoing
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Section 2 introduces the geographical orientation and architectural norms of Flatland, where the inhabitants navigate using a unique sense of direction. Unlike in Spaceland, there are no visible celestial bodies, so determining North cannot rely on stars or sunlight. Instead, nature itself supplies a solution through a subtle but constant attraction toward the South. In milder regions, this pull is barely noticeable, yet it’s sufficient for most people to find their bearings. Rain also always falls from…
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92.9 K • Ongoing
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Section 19 opens with the Sphere continuing his mission to broaden the Square’s perception by introducing more complex concepts of geometry. A cube, to the Square, initially seems like nothing more than a strange distortion of familiar shapes. He struggles to reconcile what he sees with what he knows, finding it difficult to accept that something as foreign as height could be real. The Sphere responds by demonstrating how a square, replicated upwards, creates a solid with depth. He carefully introduces…
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92.9 K • Ongoing
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