HistoryThe introduction of Cartesian coordinates reduced the three spatial dimensions to three real numbers. The possibility of "geometry of higher dimensions" was thereby opened up: the list of numbers could in principle be longer than three. Applications to geometry awaited the needs of mathematicians. Historically, the notion of higher dimensions was introduced by Bernhard Riemann, in his 1854 Habilitationsschrift, Über die Hypothesen welche der Geometrie zu Grunde liegen, where he considered a point to be any n numbers
Loosely translated:
The abstract notion of coordinates was preceded by the homogeneous coordinates of August Ferdinand Möbius, of 1827. ApplicationIt is commonplace in advanced pure and applied mathematics to study abstract sets and applied models with many dimensions. For instance, the configuration space of a rigid body in Euclidean 3-space is the 6-dimensional group of rigid motions E+(3), with 3 dimensions for position (translation) and 3 for orientation (rotation). Fairly simple constructions yield spaces with arbitrarily high positive integer dimension, and only slightly more sophistication is required to construct spaces of infinite dimension. In geometric topology, the nature of the difficulties in the subject has turned out to be such that dimensions 3 and 4 are the most resistant (see for example Whitney disc). Therefore in that context higher dimension usually means dimension ≥ 5. See alsoReferences
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