The Proper Orientation Of The Single Cylinder View of the Human Body

The question of what the proper orientation of the Single Cylinder View of the Human Body will now be addressed.

Here is a overhead view of a single cylinder.

Where is the front of the cylinder? It would be natural to say that the part of the cylinder facing towards the front of the picture is the front of the cylinder. That would be wrong though.

A cylinder is circular. That means that a cylinder looks the same from any direction. The part of the cylinder facing to the front of the picture could be the front, the back, the side or any other face of the single cylinder. There is no way to tell where the front of the cylinder is facing in the picture above.

To solve the problem of where does the front of a cylinder face, a mark could be put on the cylinder to indicate what part of the cylinder is the front.

Now there is no doubt that the front of the cylinder, indicated by the mark, is facing to the front part of the picture. If the cylinder is rotated in any direction as shown below, the mark will show where the front of the cylinder is currently facing.

Here is the picture demonstrating the Single Cylinder View of the body.

What part of the cylinder is pointing forward? It would be natural to say that the part of the cylinder facing to the front of the picture is the front of the cylinder. As in the example above, there is no way to tell what part of the single cylinder is the front. A cylinder looks the same from any direction.

There must be some way to determine what direction the front of the single cylinder representing a human being is facing.

The Single Cylinder View of the Human Body is a theoretical model that represents the human body. The single cylinder of the Single Cylinder View of the Human Body does not physically exist in real life. A mark cannot be put on this nonexistant cylinder as shown below in order to designate the front of the cylinder as was done in the demonstration above.

There must be some way that is related to the real life human body that can be used to determine what direction the front of the single cylinder of a particular human body is facing.

The obvious answer is, “the part of the single cylinder that visually corresponds to the front of the body is the front of the single cylinder”. That answer seems obvious and right, but it is not detailed enough for the purposes of explaining the behavior and construction of the human body.

The front of the single cylinder representing the human body needs to be determined in some clearly defined way. The way in which the front of a single cylinder is determined is described below.

Here is a picture of of the back of the Single Cylinder View of the Human Body in which the single cylinder has been reduced in diameter so it no longer completely encloses the human body.

The shoulder and the buttocks form a rectangular shape if they are connected together as shown in this picture.

In the next picture, the rectangle was enlarged to make it easier to see, and the camera position was changed to almost directly overhead.

This picture allows the demonstration of how to determine where the front of the single cylinder representing a human body is. The front of the single cylinder is found by drawing a triangle using the rectangle on the back as a base. The top of the triangle is the center of the back rectangle as shown below.

In the next picture, a line bisecting the triangle into two equal halves is drawn on the picture.

The line bisecting the triangle goes through the center of the human body and the center of the single cylinder. The triangle itself faces the front of the body, so the line bisecting the triangle can be treated as traveling from the base of the triangle forward to the peak.

This is how the front of the single cylinder representing the human body can be determined. Where ever the peak of the triangle formed by the shoulders is facing, that is the direction that the front of the cylinder is facing.

The human body is a soft thing that can move around in many different ways. What is it that keeps the rectangle formed by the shoulders and buttocks in it’s proper shape? What stops the rectangle from either changing shape or rotating in some direction or the other?

According to Happeh Theory, the single cylinder of the Single Cylinder View of the Human body is what provides the strength to this rectangle to hold it in it’s proper shape and location. The next picture shows just the single cylinder with a rectangle attached to the back of it.

The rectangle formed by the shoulders and the buttocks is interconnected with the single cylinder representing the human body. If the single cylinder within the body is strong and properly aligned, then according to how the human body was designed, the rectangle on the back will stay in it’s proper shape and location, and vice versa.

The rectangle attached to the back of the single cylinder is the landmark that allows the observer to determine where the front of the single cylinder is. The front of the single cylinder is the side opposite the rectangle that is attached to the single cylinder.

By observing changes to the proper shape and orientation of the rectangle, the orientation of the single cylinder within the body of a human being can be determined.

In the next picture, the human body has been rotated to the right.

It is clear that the face and chest of the human body are facing to the right. What direction is the single cylinder facing? It should be facing the same direction as the front of the body. The front of the single cylinder could be facing the front of the body, but it is impossible to tell because the single cylinder looks exactly the same as it did in the picture where the body was facing directly forward.

The rectangle in the picture was left at it’s old location. In the next picture, the rectangle is rotated so that it is again aligned on the shoulders and buttocks.

Now it is possible to determine where the front of the single cylinder is. As was expected intuitively, the single cylinder is facing the new direction the body is facing.

Although the example above seems trivial, something that could be arrived at by intuition rather than dealing with the formality of the triangle, it is necessary to use the formal way.

The shoulder and buttocks can rotate in a very subtle way that could be hard to detect by looking at the face or the chest. Using the formal way of the direction the triangle formed by the shoulders and buttocks faces, even the most minute changes to the orientation of the front of the single cylinder can be calculated.

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