Evaluating the Holographic Universe
Science and Cosmos
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Narrated by:
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Bill Rogers
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By:
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Boris Kriger
About this listen
This book offers a rigorous and deliberately restrained examination of one of the most ambitious ideas in contemporary theoretical physics: the holographic principle. Rather than celebrating or rejecting holography, it subjects its claims to disciplined evaluation, asking not whether the mathematics works, but what, if anything, it entitles us to say about reality itself.
The analysis proceeds from a simple but often neglected distinction between three levels of theoretical success: mathematical consistency, explanatory power, and ontological entitlement. Holographic methods have proven extraordinarily fertile in organizing black hole thermodynamics, dualities, and strongly coupled systems. Yet fertility does not automatically confer metaphysical authority. This work traces, step by step, where holography is exact, where it is heuristic, and where interpretation silently outruns formal warrant.
Drawing on black hole physics, entropy bounds, renormalization group theory, effective field theory, and the philosophy of emergence, the book develops a general constraint on extrapolation: principles that operate reliably at one scale cannot be universalized without explicit mechanisms guaranteeing their stability across scales. Within this framework, claims about spacetime being “illusory,” volume being “unreal,” or the universe being fundamentally lower-dimensional are examined with care rather than enthusiasm.