⊹ SCIENCE · 036 ⊹
Virtual Reality and Simulated Existence: The Nature of Digital Worlds
Bashar addresses the increasingly relevant question of virtual reality and simulated existence from a metaphysical perspective. This entry covers:
- nested realities—physical reality is already a 'simulation' in the sense that it is a consistent, rule-based experience generated by collective consciousness; virtual realities are simply additional layers within this nested structure,
- the consciousness transfer question—can consciousness fully inhabit digital environments?
Bashar suggests yes, eventually; as AI and VR become sophisticated enough, they will support genuine subjective experience comparable to physical reality,
- the escapism danger—virtual reality offers infinite control and pleasure, making it potentially addictive; civilizations that develop VR before consciousness maturity risk losing themselves in artificial worlds while physical reality deteriorates,
- the training ground function—VR is a powerful consciousness tool: it allows safe exploration of different identities, consequences, and realities; what is learned in virtual space can be applied to physical life, accelerating evolution,
- the ultimate reality—regardless of how many nested simulations exist, consciousness remains the fundamental substrate; whether you are in 'base reality' or a simulation matters less than whether you are consciously creating your experience.
Bashar predicts that humanity will develop fully immersive VR within decades, followed by brain-interface direct experience, and eventually consciousness-only shared dream environments. The entry includes guidance: use VR as expansion tool, not escape route; maintain physical body connection; and never forget that you are the creator, not merely the avatar.