No...but neither do you have any idea what a hologram is. Read Gabor's book and find out. (If you don't know about Denis Gabor---yep, you don't have any idea of what a hologram is.)
Very good! Gabor is the hologram man,...but not the "Holographic Universe" man. That honor falls to theoretical tards like Suskind, Hawking, and string-thing Kako. It's kind of an inside joke in astro-physics circles. The halo (3-D) is a projection from a 2-d plane of a universe,...in theory...which makes Suskind, Hawkings, and string-thing "Flat Earthers". (you get invited to leave the lecture if you point this out) Trust the science! As an aside, those 45 cal lead balls don't qualify as "rays". :)
To be candid, I think the talk of a "hologram universe" is somewhere between frivolous and...frivolous. It explains nothing and adds a needless complexity.
As for the .45 caliber bullet, my point was to establish that it doesn't qualify as an illusion! (My graduate lab director in the 1970s derogated the idea of death rays. "Hell, we already have death rays. They're called machine guns! You point them at someone, pull the trigger, and they die!")
No...but neither do you have any idea what a hologram is. Read Gabor's book and find out. (If you don't know about Denis Gabor---yep, you don't have any idea of what a hologram is.)
Very good! Gabor is the hologram man,...but not the "Holographic Universe" man. That honor falls to theoretical tards like Suskind, Hawking, and string-thing Kako. It's kind of an inside joke in astro-physics circles. The halo (3-D) is a projection from a 2-d plane of a universe,...in theory...which makes Suskind, Hawkings, and string-thing "Flat Earthers". (you get invited to leave the lecture if you point this out) Trust the science! As an aside, those 45 cal lead balls don't qualify as "rays". :)
To be candid, I think the talk of a "hologram universe" is somewhere between frivolous and...frivolous. It explains nothing and adds a needless complexity.
As for the .45 caliber bullet, my point was to establish that it doesn't qualify as an illusion! (My graduate lab director in the 1970s derogated the idea of death rays. "Hell, we already have death rays. They're called machine guns! You point them at someone, pull the trigger, and they die!")