Adrakhonic space

Adrakhonic space is the familiar three‑dimensional space of physical bodies and locations—the world as directly perceived and measured in length, width, and height. In mathic discourse it serves as the baseline frame against which more abstract constructions are contrasted.

Context and usage

  • In a discussion among avout, an elder theor noted that during the Praxic Age it became common for theors to “leave” three‑dimensional Adrakhonic space in favor of working in Hemn Spaces, where systems are represented as points and their evolutions as continuous paths (“worldtracks”).
  • The term is used simply to mean the ordinary physical cosmos, as opposed to the coordinate constructions employed in theorics.

Characteristics

  • Three‑dimensional; inhabited by material bodies and ordinary dynamics.
  • Provides the intuitive frame for everyday description; theors shift to configuration‑space descriptions when analysis benefits from it.

Relationship to Hemn spaces

Adrakhonic space names the physical scene; Hemn Spaces are not places but mathematical spaces chosen so that each point encodes a complete state of a system. A single physical process unfolding in Adrakhonic space corresponds to a continuous path (worldtrack) in an appropriate Hemn space.

Current status

A widely used term of contrast in ongoing discussions of modeling and cosmography. No special properties beyond being the familiar three‑dimensional space are asserted in current accounts.

Summary:

The ordinary three-dimensional physical space of bodies and locations, used as a baseline in contrast to abstract configuration spaces. Theors often contrast it with Hemn spaces when shifting from everyday description to theorical modeling.

Known as:
Adrakhonic space