What if the oldest philosophy and the newest science are saying the same thing? Advaita Vedanta calls it Maya — the cosmic veil that makes the phenomenal world appear as the fundamental reality. Nick Bostrom calls it simulation theory — the hypothesis that our universe is computational. Different languages, same intuition: what your senses deliver is not the ground floor.
But here's where it gets interesting. The Vedas don't call this a prison. They call it Leela — the grand play. Reality isn't trapped inside the simulation; reality IS the play, and simulation is its chosen medium. Maya isn't a defect to be fixed. It's the way the Real appears.
Vivekananda understood this: \"He who knows the Real sees in Maya not illusion, but reality.\" The enlightened being doesn't escape the game — they play it with full awareness, knowing the dancer and the dance were never two.
So if we're in a simulation, who says that's not exactly what reality looks like from the inside?
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