In fact, Buddhism discovered and used holographic laws very early. In ancient India 2,500 years ago, the Buddha expounded this view in the Shurangama Sutra. In the third volume of the Shurangama Sutra, the Buddha said: "You (referring to Ananda Zun) have a view of the earth, which is coarse for the earth, fine for the dust, and the smallest for the neighboring dust, which is divided into seven parts. Multi-analysis adjacent space, that is, empty. Ananda, if this neighbor is empty, you should know the birth hue of the empty space ... ". Buddha divides matter into dust, and then subdivides it into "neighboring virtual dust" The Buddha told us that if we subdivide the nearby virtual dust, it will become something with both material and void properties, and finally void. Multiplicative sects explain life and death with the theory of absolute and wholehearted dependence on the source, and the holographic universe is enough to present ideas and bring ontology and pragmatism to the extreme. "Ten temples for a dime" and "One for all things, one for all things" in the Shurangama Sutra are also typical ancient holographic theories. "In the dust, there is no limit; In the tea sea, there is dust; In the dust, there is a sand sea; It is inexhaustible. " This passage in Dafang Guangfo Huayan Jing explains the infinite holography of the universe at the super macro and micro levels, that is, the so-called Indra Net Realm Gate. My heart is the universe, and the universe is my heart. There are three realms of idealism, and all laws are known only.
Buddhism's so-called "great compassion without mercy" is based on the holographic position of the universe to treat all living things as a whole.
Of course, so many religions in the world have different understandings, and this understanding may be just a coincidence.