There comes a moment in every person's life when reality begins to feel strange. Youmay be looking at the stars. Or walking through a busy street. Or sitting alone insilence. And suddenly a question appears: What if this world is not what it seems?For thousands of years mystics, philosophers, and sages have claimed somethingradical: Reality is not ultimately real. The Hindus called it Maya-the cosmic illusion.
The Buddhists described existence as a dream-like experience. The ancient Greekswondered if humanity lived inside shadows projected by a deeper reality. Today, modern science is beginning to ask the same question. Physicists now suggestthe universe behaves less like solid matter and more like information. Someresearchers even propose a startling possibility: The universe may function like asimulation.
But if reality is a simulation, then a deeper question emerges: Who is the player?This book proposes a bold idea: Human life is a simulation entered by the soul forexperience, healing, evolution, and awakening. Your body is the avatar. Your mind isthe interface. Your soul is the player. And death is simply logging out.
There comes a moment in every person's life when reality begins to feel strange. Youmay be looking at the stars. Or walking through a busy street. Or sitting alone insilence. And suddenly a question appears: What if this world is not what it seems?For thousands of years mystics, philosophers, and sages have claimed somethingradical: Reality is not ultimately real. The Hindus called it Maya-the cosmic illusion.
The Buddhists described existence as a dream-like experience. The ancient Greekswondered if humanity lived inside shadows projected by a deeper reality. Today, modern science is beginning to ask the same question. Physicists now suggestthe universe behaves less like solid matter and more like information. Someresearchers even propose a startling possibility: The universe may function like asimulation.
But if reality is a simulation, then a deeper question emerges: Who is the player?This book proposes a bold idea: Human life is a simulation entered by the soul forexperience, healing, evolution, and awakening. Your body is the avatar. Your mind isthe interface. Your soul is the player. And death is simply logging out.