Haha, All blind men leading the other.
If so easy just connect 3D Bluray play player and magically play 3D movies on any 2D TV, then why they need to sell expensive 3D TV in the first place.
The TV itself must also be able to support 3D.
Briefly
1) for Passive 3D, the TV screen itself has a special filter that polarizes each line of pixels on the screen. In other words the odd lines are polarised differently than the Even lines. Only with the Passive 3D glasses (also with separate polarisation for each eye) will you be able to see the two different Left and Right images separately on each eye.
A 2D TV won't have this filter.
2) For Active 3D (diff tech), first the TV must at least preferably be 120Hz (60hz each eye for comfortable viewing), and the TV itself must know how to input the left and right image at double rate and display one after the other at combined 120hz so that your battery operated Active Shutter glasses can sync in tandem with the TV, and see only the Left and Right signal respectively on separate eyes.
A 2D Tv won't be able to do that. Even if the TV is 120Hz, it still won't know how to deal with the double rate 3D signal from the bluray player/media player unless it has 3D support circuitry built in.
However, 3D movies will be still able to play in 2D on your TV if it detects your TV is not 3D capable.
For those common 3D SBS movies downloads (not the 'true' approved 3D format , in layman terms), it is slightly different variation, but concept is similar. You will see a Left and Right Picture on your 2D TV side by side, but you won't be able to combine the two images together if your TV is not 3D supported.
Not everyone are blind la... there's are still some valid point some where...
Noted on your explanation...
I m guess I'll still give it a try ... solely just for testing purposes. Wonder how it might turn out.
Another... probably port in PS4 VR and enjoy some "3D" feel of it... in games mode.