The comparison here is, as usual, to go down a dimension. Imagine living in a world where everything is constant vertically, like those old 3D maze screen savers or Wolfenstein 3D. You're really seeing a 1D amount of information about a 2D world (in fact, this is how the calculation is for Wolf3D and other games of its era). You can infer depths to objects if you have two eyes.
Now contrast that to if you were plucked up vertically 'above' the game's level to look down upon it. Now you can see the entire 2D extent of the maze at once. Before, your vision was blocked by the walls, now you see the walls and what's on the other side of the walls simultaneously in a way that's entirely distinct from simply seeing through a transparent object.
Now, like seeing a 1D amount of information about a 2D maze while live inside it, we see a 2D amount of information about a 3D world around us (a picture demonstrate's this 2D amount of information - it's planar). Now imagine being lifted out the 3D plane of existence so that you could behold the entirety of the 3D world at once. That's the rough analogy.
Now contrast that to if you were plucked up vertically 'above' the game's level to look down upon it. Now you can see the entire 2D extent of the maze at once. Before, your vision was blocked by the walls, now you see the walls and what's on the other side of the walls simultaneously in a way that's entirely distinct from simply seeing through a transparent object.
Now, like seeing a 1D amount of information about a 2D maze while live inside it, we see a 2D amount of information about a 3D world around us (a picture demonstrate's this 2D amount of information - it's planar). Now imagine being lifted out the 3D plane of existence so that you could behold the entirety of the 3D world at once. That's the rough analogy.