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The holographic principle suggests that a three-dimensional reality arises from a two-dimensional boundary, avoiding pseudoscience. In simpler terms, space and time emerge from fundamental laws of nature, such as gravity and electrostatic forces.
Evidence for this can be seen in black holes. When something crosses the event horizon of a black hole, the two-dimensional information on the boundary encodes quantum gravity and the forces pulling objects inward. The three-dimensional effect we observe is the space within the black hole.
Applying this to the macro universe, everything emerges from the Big Bang or a singularity point 13.8 billion years ago. All the energy required to create the observable universe expanded through an inflationary field, and this expansion continues today. The two-dimensional information at the boundary is the singularity point and the forces present at the universe's inception, while the three-dimensional reality we perceive arises from those early conditions
Now, consider the early stages of the universe: how did energy, before space, time, depth, or matter, give rise to the laws governing our current spacetime construct? One relevant theory is the Casimir effect experiment. In this experiment, two uncharged plates are placed close together in a vacuum (a space devoid of matter), yet activity is observed due to quantum fluctuations in quantum fields. This makes sense because quantum fields, governed by universal rules, are present even in a vacuum.
This raises a question about the conditions 13.8 billion years ago, before our current spacetime construct existed. How do we account for quantum potentiality? Without space to expand into, random quantum fluctuations would need to draw potentiality from somewhere, such as quantum fields. But where do these quantum fields derive their energy, and where does that energy come from?
This leads to an infinite regress problem. Even with a multiverse hypothesis—where nested hierarchies of billions of universes arise every second, each Big Bang triggering another in a chain—this still loops back to the original question: where did the rules governing the initial singularity come from?
This is a point in science where I’m genuinely confused, to be honest. I don’t have a clear answer, so I have to invoke god if not what else could stop the infinite regress some 1 help me
Evidence for this can be seen in black holes. When something crosses the event horizon of a black hole, the two-dimensional information on the boundary encodes quantum gravity and the forces pulling objects inward. The three-dimensional effect we observe is the space within the black hole.
Applying this to the macro universe, everything emerges from the Big Bang or a singularity point 13.8 billion years ago. All the energy required to create the observable universe expanded through an inflationary field, and this expansion continues today. The two-dimensional information at the boundary is the singularity point and the forces present at the universe's inception, while the three-dimensional reality we perceive arises from those early conditions
Now, consider the early stages of the universe: how did energy, before space, time, depth, or matter, give rise to the laws governing our current spacetime construct? One relevant theory is the Casimir effect experiment. In this experiment, two uncharged plates are placed close together in a vacuum (a space devoid of matter), yet activity is observed due to quantum fluctuations in quantum fields. This makes sense because quantum fields, governed by universal rules, are present even in a vacuum.
This raises a question about the conditions 13.8 billion years ago, before our current spacetime construct existed. How do we account for quantum potentiality? Without space to expand into, random quantum fluctuations would need to draw potentiality from somewhere, such as quantum fields. But where do these quantum fields derive their energy, and where does that energy come from?
This leads to an infinite regress problem. Even with a multiverse hypothesis—where nested hierarchies of billions of universes arise every second, each Big Bang triggering another in a chain—this still loops back to the original question: where did the rules governing the initial singularity come from?
This is a point in science where I’m genuinely confused, to be honest. I don’t have a clear answer, so I have to invoke god if not what else could stop the infinite regress some 1 help me