Top physicists explore whether our universe might be a sophisticated simulation, examining quantum clues and the possibility that reality itself is programmed—plus what elites might be hiding.

There’s a lot of researchers scientists and other physicist that are looking in to the reality that human beings may be living in a simulation, meaning that the world‘s construct is not what we’ve been told and it’s been constructed by something else entirely and also that there’s many many many many many multiple universes and dimensions either below this one or above this one that human beings don’t have the capacity to either understand or the world elites are keeping the information from us


Создано выпускниками Колумбийского университета в Сан-Франциско
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Создано выпускниками Колумбийского университета в Сан-Франциско

Lena: You know what's wild, Miles? I was reading about how some of the world's top physicists—people like Neil deGrasse Tyson and even Elon Musk—are seriously entertaining the idea that we might be living in a computer simulation. But here's what I find fascinating: the more we learn about quantum physics, the more our universe actually starts to look... well, coded.
Miles: Right! It's not just sci-fi anymore. When you dig into the physics, there are these genuinely strange clues. Like, reality appears to be quantized—broken into tiny discrete packets, just like computer pixels. And then there's this bizarre observer effect in quantum mechanics where particles seem to only "decide" their properties when we're looking at them.
Lena: Exactly! It's like the universe is conserving computational resources, only rendering what needs to be observed. But I have to ask—if we're questioning whether reality itself might be simulated, how do we even begin to test something like that?
Miles: That's the million-dollar question, and it gets even weirder when you consider the logical paradox at the heart of it all. So let's dive into what the simulation hypothesis actually claims and why it's both compelling and deeply problematic.