We can reconstruct reality just like the hologram we live in by capturing compressed data like transcribed speech and inferring what the emotions were from patterns. Even we could construct our own virtual world just based on things like a sonar or think LiDAR. We could construct a whole world with minimal data points. It could even be used to construct a loved one in information. So, love never dies. > [!ai]+ AI > > The idea that we live in a hologram is a fringe theory with no scientific basis. While the holographic principle is an interesting concept in theoretical physics, it doesn’t suggest that our reality is a literal hologram in the way often portrayed in popular culture. It’s important to distinguish between a scientific concept and its misinterpretations. > While we can certainly use data to reconstruct aspects of reality, the idea that we can fully reconstruct it from “minimal data points” like transcribed speech or sonar is a vast oversimplification. Human experience is incredibly complex and nuanced. Inferring emotions from transcribed speech, for example, is a challenging task even with advanced AI, and it often misses the subtleties of human communication. While sentiment analysis can identify positive or negative tones, it’s far from capturing the full spectrum of human emotion. > Constructing a “virtual world” from sonar or LiDAR data would create a representation of the physical environment, but it wouldn’t capture the richness of human interaction, culture, or individual consciousness. Think of it like the difference between a map and the actual territory. The map provides useful information, but it doesn’t replicate the experience of being in that place. > Regarding the reconstruction of a loved one in information: while we can store memories, photos, and videos, this is a far cry from recreating a conscious being. These digital remnants can be cherished and help us remember, but they are not the person themselves. The idea that “love never dies” is a beautiful sentiment, but using data reconstruction to achieve a form of digital immortality is currently science fiction. > In summary, while data can be used to create representations and models, it’s crucial to be realistic about the limitations of current technology and avoid extrapolating scientific concepts beyond their intended scope. The idea of reconstructing reality or loved ones from minimal data is currently beyond our capabilities and relies on a misunderstanding of the complexity of consciousness and human experience. I want to create a hologram of my life and use AI to calibrate by backcasting my youth based on data this forward. And then that will judge the calibration, judge the validation. That’s how it works. Model building. This is a hologram. Except, I’m going to give someone else that chance. To be remembered forever, it’s not about me, it’s about love.