Wednesday, February 24, 2010

We Are Just A 3-D Projection of a 2-D universe.



Friend sent me this article from the NewScientist, about a mind-altering discovery a German scientist made of humans living and existing in a hologram world:


The holograms you find on credit cards and banknotes are etched on two-dimensional plastic films. When light bounces off them, it recreates the appearance of a 3D image. In the 1990s physicists Leonard Susskind and Nobel prizewinner Gerard 't Hooft suggested that the same principle might apply to the universe as a whole. Our everyday experience might itself be a holographic projection of physical processes that take place on a distant, 2D surface.

The "holographic principle" challenges our sensibilities. It seems hard to believe that you woke up, brushed your teeth and are reading this article because of something happening on the boundary of the universe. No one knows what it would mean for us if we really do live in a hologram, yet theorists have good reasons to believe that many aspects of the holographic principle are true.


Mind-blowing. But if that's the case, why can't my hands pass through me? Why do objects hit each other and not go through each other?

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