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Hologram Universe

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Reality is a Dream. Reality is a Matrix. Www.drchinese.com/David/Aspect.pdf. Radford University. Radford University, located in Radford in the U.S. state of Virginia, is one of the state's eight doctoral-degree granting public universities.

Radford University

Originally founded in 1910, Radford offers comprehensive curricula for undergraduates in more than 100 fields, and graduate programs including the M.F.A., M.B.A. and specialized doctoral programs in health-related professions.[2] Academics[edit] Radford's undergraduate programs emphasize the liberal arts, business, and teacher education. The graduate and undergraduate programs in business administration offered by the College of Business and Economics at Radford University are accredited by the AACSB International — The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business.

Radford is among the 9 percent of the world's (top 10% in the United States) business schools that have achieved business and/or accounting accreditation from AACSB. The university has a student/faculty ratio of 18:1 with an average class size of 34[3]. Student life[edit] Alain Aspect. Alain Aspect (French: [aspɛ] ( ); born 15 June 1947) is a French physicist noted for his experimental work on quantum entanglement.

Alain Aspect

Biography[edit] Aspect is a graduate of the École Normale Supérieure de Cachan (ENS Cachan). He passed the 'agrégation' in physics in 1969 and received his master's degree from Université d'Orsay. He then did his national service, teaching for three years in Cameroon. In the early 1980s, while working on his PhD thesis[1] from the lesser academic rank of lecturer, he performed the elusive "Bell test experiments" that showed that Albert Einstein, Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen's reductio ad absurdum of quantum mechanics, namely that it implied 'ghostly action at a distance', did in fact appear to be realised when two particles were separated by an arbitrarily large distance (see EPR paradox).

Aspect's experiments were considered to provide overwhelming support to the thesis that Bell's inequalities are violated in its CHSH version. Selected bibliography[edit] David Bohm. David Joseph Bohm FRS[1] (December 20, 1917 – October 27, 1992) was an American theoretical physicist who contributed innovative and unorthodox ideas to quantum theory, philosophy of mind, and neuropsychology.

David Bohm

He is considered to be one of the most significant theoretical physicists of the 20th century.[2] Bohm advanced the view that the old Cartesian model of reality (that there were two interacting kinds of substance - mental and physical) was limited, in the light of developments in quantum physics. He developed in detail a mathematical and physical theory of implicate and explicate order to complement it.[3] He also believed that the working of the brain, at the cellular level, obeyed the mathematics of some quantum effects, and postulated that thought was distributed and non-localised in the way that quantum entities do not readily fit into our conventional model of space and time.[4][not in citation given] Biography[edit] Youth and college[edit]

Michael Talbot (author) Michael Coleman Talbot (September 29, 1953 – May 27, 1992)[1] was an American author of several books highlighting parallels between ancient mysticism and quantum mechanics, and espousing a theoretical model of reality that suggests the physical universe is akin to a giant hologram.[2] According to Talbot ESP, telepathy, and other paranormal phenomena are a product of this holographic model of reality.[3] Talbot was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan, on September 29, 1953.

Michael Talbot (author)

He was originally a fiction/science fiction author.[1][4] He also contributed articles to The Village Voice and other publications.[4] Talbot attempted to incorporate spirituality, religion and science to shed light on profound questions.[5] His non-fiction books include Mysticism And The New Physics, Beyond The Quantum, and The Holographic Universe.