On a floor that is not perfectly flat we often have to put something under a table's leg so that it is not unsteady.
It turn's out that than one should blame the axioms of stereometry.
Let's before recall some facts of planimetry. Through a given point on a plane pass a whole, as it is sometimes said in mathematics, pencil of lines. However, if we fix another point, there is a single line passing through both of them. Indeed, through any two distinct points in a space (particularly in a plane) we can always draw a line, in addition a single one.
And what do three points in a space define? As one of the stereometry axioms says, if three points are not collinear, there is a plane passing through them which is unique. As a consequence through a line and a point not that doesn't lie on it, passes a unique plane. You can check it yourself.
That is why a stool with three legs is always stable on any floor. But a stool (or a table) with four pivots is often unsteady. The length of it's three legs and the level of the floor in the pivots uniquely define a plane. While the end of the fourth leg be upper than the floor level.