The World as Hologram

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   | footer    = '''''The World as Hologram, L. Susskind, J.Math.Phys.36:6377-6396,1995'', 2012''', prints on photographic paper, 143x110cm each.
   | footer    = '''''The World as Hologram, L. Susskind, J.Math.Phys.36:6377-6396,1995'', 2012''', prints on photographic paper, 143x110cm each.
   | footer_align = right
   | footer_align = right
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  | direction = vertical
   | width    = 800
   | width    = 800
   | image1    = The World As Hologram 0.jpg
   | image1    = The World As Hologram 0.jpg
   | alt1      = Overview
   | alt1      = Overview
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  | image2    = The World As Hologram 1.jpg
 +
  | alt2      = Detail
   }}
   }}
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The second and third pages of a scientific paper are reproduced from their original PDF, in its computer screen resolution. The text thus appears as made of elementary colored squares. The paper justifies the scientific hypothesis of our universe existing only on the surface of an infinitely remote screen.
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The second and third pages of a scientific paper are reproduced from their original PDF, in its computer screen resolution. The text thus appears as made of elementary colored squares. This paper justifies in simple terms the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holographic_principle holographic principle], according to which our universe can be described as a structure on the surface of an infinitely remote screen. The author, an eminent specialist of string theory, postulates that "in a certain sense the world is two dimensional and not three dimensional as previously supposed".
[[Category: Knowledge]]
[[Category: Knowledge]]
[[Category: Solid image]]
[[Category: Solid image]]
[[Category: 2012]]
[[Category: 2012]]

Latest revision as of 12:39, 10 February 2012

Overview
Detail
The World as Hologram, L. Susskind, J.Math.Phys.36:6377-6396,1995, 2012, prints on photographic paper, 143x110cm each.

The second and third pages of a scientific paper are reproduced from their original PDF, in its computer screen resolution. The text thus appears as made of elementary colored squares. This paper justifies in simple terms the holographic principle, according to which our universe can be described as a structure on the surface of an infinitely remote screen. The author, an eminent specialist of string theory, postulates that "in a certain sense the world is two dimensional and not three dimensional as previously supposed".

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