"Have you ever had a dream that you were sure was real, Neo? What happens if you don't wake up from that dream? How can you tell the difference between the dream world and the real world? " Morpheus asked Neon in the movie The Matrix. I heard the same lines over and over again. Each time I would rewind them as if I was hearing them for the first time. If that didn't work, then I wrote them down on a piece of paper and read them hundreds of times. I highly recommend watching the entire series of The Matrix over and over again.

I find it as deep and inextricable as Shakespeare's words, "We are all made of the same stuff that dreams are made of."

Some thinkers have the idea that "this world is a dream and we are a dream. All experiences are temporary and deceptive, the universe is a shadow" seems to be almost accepted by some scientists.

Plato's "World of Ideas" and "Cave Theory" are like footprints of the holographic universe from centuries ago.

In the movie Avatar, as Jake Sully falls asleep in a capsule in the real world, he wakes up in the world of the Navi and begins to live as a Navi. As he sleeps there, he wakes up in the real world. And in the real world, Jake Sully, a war veteran, is confined to a wheelchair because he cannot use his paralyzed legs. After a while he falls in love with Neytiri, the princess of the Navi, and remains in their world as an avatar, a Navi who can run and walk, and who chooses to wake up there, even as he falls asleep in this world.

"What if we are living in a computer simulation? How do you know we're not? It looks like you are holding a real book made of real paper. But how do you know it's not because a computer is telling your brain that you are experiencing holding a real book made of real paper? How do you know which of your experiences of the world are reliable?" says David Kidder, describing skepticism.

What about holographic universe theories of space and reality? A universe where plastic reflects off a two-dimensional screen, like the holograms on credit cards. What happens if you throw your hat into a black hole? It would not survive the gravity of the black hole and would be lost forever. According to new information, an exact copy of the information it contains is scattered and stored on the surface of the black hole, just as it is copied on a computer. So the hat exists in two places at once. The three-dimensional version of the hat that is lost in infinity in the black hole, and the two-dimensional version that remains in the copy on the surface of the black hole. The space inside the black hole and the information outside. Could everything you can think of be stored here in two dimensions outside the black hole? Galaxies, universes, even us? In the end, what are we experiencing as reality? A hologram? An illusion? An illusion?

Or, as has been claimed recently, is the world actually four-dimensional and we see it as three-dimensional? Or, according to another school that claims the opposite, is the whole universe and we are only two-dimensional and space is an illusion? I guess I'm a bit confused today. Why don't you dive into scientific documentaries? Research, study, read... Believe me, it is very enjoyable...

Mukaddes Pekin Başdil

Researcher-Author

Source: Denizli Haber

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