In the holographic plate example, your eyes receive true wavefronts encoded in the static 2D interference pattern—delivering genuine binocular depth, parallax, and focus shifts as you move. The 3D scene feels volumetrically real, with no flat "screen" boundary.
An immersive 2D cinematic experience projects sequential flat frames onto a surface. Your senses detect a 2D light field; the brain infers depth via cues like perspective and motion, but head movement reveals no new angles or true parallax—it's illusory, with visible screen edges and frame-rate limits.
In OPH's actual 2D holographic screen, observer patches directly access consistent info encoding emergent 3D + time. Senses render it as seamless classical reality—no projection artifacts, just the fundamental "view" of spacetime itself.
A great static analogy for the 2D holographic screen in OPH is a holographic plate (like on credit cards or museum displays). It's a flat, unmoving 2D film etched with fixed interference patterns. Shine the right light on it, and a fully realistic 3D image pops out—with depth, parallax, and motion as you shift your viewpoint—all encoded statically on that 2D surface.
This matches how observer patches on a holographic screen could yield our perceived 3D reality from pure 2D info.
Quantum field theory and general relativity are exceptionally well-tested effective theories, confirmed by countless experiments in their regimes. They're not "proven" in an absolute sense though—both fail at Planck scales, singularities, and unification.
OPH is a new speculative framework claiming to derive them (plus SM particle content/masses to high precision) from 4 information axioms on observer patches. No experimental disproof yet, but it's early days. The math is open-source; dig in to judge for yourself.
@Sadie_NC I got 4: all in one week. All in Paris in 1978 on a school trip with class mates and some teachers. The best thing of Paris in 1978 was the Underground. The worst thing that we saw (in a pub) the Dutch football team lose the World Championship.
😭😭😭