I have been learning about projective varieties recently and I realised that I have some trouble trying to grasp what lines and planes are even in say $\Bbb{P}^3$. For one, how should I think about a line? Well given homogeneous coordinates for two points $A$ and $B$ I can write down an expression that gives all possible points on the "line between $A$ and $B$". However this does not seem satisfying because of the following.
In affine space, I am inclined to think of a line as a being a one dimensional $k$ - vector space that is isomorphic to $\Bbb{A}^1$ under an affine change of coordinates. A plane isomorphic to $k^2$, etc. Also, I am inclined to think that given two planes $P_1,P_2$ in $\Bbb{A}^3$ the "dimension" of their intersection is at most $1$.
However can all of this intuitive reasoning be transferred over to $\Bbb{P}^3$ say? By this I mean is the intersection of two "planes in $\Bbb{P}^3$" a "line"? This is of course assuming that we have defined a "plane" and "line" in $\Bbb{P}^3$. What should be the definition of a "plane" in $\Bbb{P}^3$?
Also, how many "hyperplanes" do I need to describe a line in $\Bbb{P}^n$?
I guess all this is confusing for me because my background has mainly been in a lot of algebra and not much on questions like that.