The current cosmic acceleration does not imply that our Universe is basically
de Sitter-like: in the first part of this work we argue that, by introducing
matter into *anti-de Sitter* spacetime in a natural way, one may be able to
account for the acceleration just as well. However, this leads to a Big Crunch,
and the Euclidean versions of Bang/Crunch cosmologies have [apparently]
disconnected conformal boundaries. As Maldacena and Maoz have recently
stressed, this seems to contradict the holographic principle. In the second
part we argue that this "double boundary problem" is a matter not of geometry
but rather of how one chooses a conformal compactification: if one chooses to
compactify in an unorthodox way, then the appearance of disconnectedness can be
regarded as a *coordinate effect*. With the kind of matter we have introduced
here, namely a Euclidean axion, the underlying compact Euclidean manifold has
an unexpectedly non-trivial topology: it is in fact one of the 75 possible
underlying manifolds of flat compact four-dimensional Euclidean spaces.Comment: 29 pages, 3 figures, added references and comparison with "cyclic"
cosmology, JHEP versio