>>7627075That doesn't make sense.
Lets say there is a space, with a shape connected by lines between points [x,y,z] that are (-1, -1, 0 ), (+1,-1,0) and (0,+1,0). A triangle, right? Let's say you change the z values of any of those points. You still have a triangle, even though an entire axis of dimensions has been changed. But what you perceive is determined by how many dimensions you are capable of perceiving. If you can only perceive 2 dimensions suddenly what is a triangle looks like something else entirely. It's still objectively triangle though.
Similarly in your example, the object that is a cube at (w,x,y,z) is still a cube at (2w,x,y,z), it just transformed on an axis the human mind is incapable of conceiving, so a human perceiving that object will see something that doesn't appear to be a cube. It's still a cube.
I didn't graduate highschool.