There's clearly no possibility we'll experience anything else ("having" more or less dimensions suddenly, or experiencing a point with no surrounding open set")

In contrast to this established view M-theory suggests that we may be constrained to a four-manifold embedded in a higher dimensional space (constrained on the Brane). (for an early proposal see hep-th/0001113 by Akama et al.)

In such models gravity is free to propagate into the higher dimensional space.

This has observational consequences. The Einstein field equations have an extra term. It should be observable in two ways. Directly, gravitation on length scales of a few millimeters should deviate from Newtonian gravity. It has implications for the evolution of Inflation in the early Universe.

Should such effects be observed we would discover that our world is stranger than heretofore thought.

This month's (August 2000) Scientific American carries an article about it, but I have not read it and cannot vouch for it.