Thursday, June 9, 2022

The famous British physicist Brian Cox announced on TV that we are all holograms

 British physicist Professor Brian Cox has already surprised us with his amazing declaration some time ago. According to the Daily Mail portal, the scientist spoke about an unusual theory of the origin of people, pointing out that each of us is actually a hologram.

Cox, 53, noted that the universe may not be the way everyone is used to understanding it from textbooks.

"By answering questions that Stephen Hawking asked more than 50 years ago, we came to the conclusion - and yes, I'll say it aloud - that we can all be holograms," said the physicist.

The presenter Ruth Langsford reacted to the words of the scientist in a typical way when the mind stabs with what she hears and stated - "

"My mind was not ready for this. I was never strong at science in school and I try very hard to understand your conclusions, but it surprises me," she said.

Then Cox and the presenters changed the subject, but at the end of the conversation, a clearly agitated Langsford returned to the subject.

 "Now I wonder if I really am a hologram?" Hearing her, the physicist replied, "Yes, probably yes."

In the comments under the program on the broadcaster's website, many people expressed their amazement at this statement by the scientist. Some people started joking about it. "I am a hologram. Can someone come and turn me off? "- wrote the user after watching the broadcast. There were also those who thanked the physicist for making them explore new data about what the universe is.

The theory of the holographic universe is gaining more and more supporters, but it is still just theorizing. The idea that we probably live in a hologram sounds absurd, but it is a natural extension of our knowledge of black holes and the principles of theoretical physics. It can also be surprisingly helpful to physicists wrestling with a theory about how the universe works at its most basic level.

In 1990, physicists Leonard Susskind and Nobel Prize winner Gerard 't Hooft suggested that the holographic principle could apply to the universe as a whole. Our daily experience may itself be a projection of holographic physical processes that take place on a distant 2D surface.

The whole concept sounds quite shocking and has its references also in experimental physics. Scientists have long noticed that the mere fact of observing an experiment influences its course and the interaction with the observer means that we are not dealing with full probability, but rather with the determination of the world through interactions. This is puzzling, as there are indications that people are simply not aware that they are generating their world through interactions with their surroundings and thoughts, but physicists are already getting to this mystery and getting closer to what the world's leading religions have long discovered.

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