My Lecturer mentioned at the beginning of my differential geometry course that you need at least $4$-D to embed a $2$-D shape on an ambient space ( not too sure what ambient space means ....)
My question is why is this so ? We're only a few weeks in but hopefully the explanation wont require any concepts which are too advanced.
An smoothly embedded closed surface in $\mathbb{R}^3$ will have a well-defined "outward" normal and so will be orientable. Hence if you try to embed a non-orientable closed surface, such as the Klein bottle, into $\mathbb{R}^3$ you will necessarily get a self-intersection. By going one dimension up to $\mathbb{R}^4$ and pull the self-intersection out you get an embedding.
Of course, for orientable surface (such as a sphere) you could do it in $\mathbb{R}^3$, but your lecturer is referring to the lowest dimension to embed all surfaces.