The fourth dimension
50 THE FOURTH DIMENSION
This compression and expansion along two lines at right angles is what is called shear; it is equivalent to the sliding illustrated above, combined with a turning round.
Fig. 25. Fig. 26.
In pure shear a body is compressed and extended in two directions at right angles to each other, so that its volume remains unchanged.
Now we know that our material bodies resist shearshear does violence to the internal arrangement of their particles, but they turn as wholes without such internal resistance.
But there is an exception. In a liquid shear and rotation take place equally easily, there is no more resistance against a shear than there is against a rotation.
Now, suppose all bodies were to be reduced to the liquid state, in which they yield to shear and to rotation equally easily, and then were to be reconstructed as solids, but in such a way that shear and rotation had interchanged places.
That is to say, let us suppose that when they had become solids again they would shear without offering any internal resistance, but a rotation would do violence to their internal arrangement.
That is, we should have a world in which shear would have taken the place of rotation.