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{| class="wikitable" style="float:right; margin:0 0 1em 1em; width:320px;"
= Simulationism =
! colspan="2" | Simulationism
|-
! Family
| Modern / Philosophical and technology-centered worldview
|-
! Origin region
| Global philosophical and internet culture
|-
! Founding period
| 21st century CE, with older philosophical roots
|-
! Estimated adherents
| Unknown; usually a philosophical hypothesis or spiritual speculation rather than an organized religion.
|}


'''Simulationism''' is a modern worldview or speculative belief that reality may be a simulation, sometimes interpreted spiritually through themes of creators, code, awakening, and liberation.
'''Simulationism''' is a worldview or philosophical-spiritual idea centered on the possibility that reality is simulated, designed, computed, or nested within artificial worlds.


== Overview ==
== Overview ==


Simulationism is not a formal religion, but it can function religiously when it gives people a cosmology, creator concept, moral speculation, or salvation narrative. It overlaps with simulation hypothesis debates, Matrix-inspired spirituality, gnosticism-like ideas of illusion, and technology-centered theology. Neutral coverage should distinguish philosophical arguments from religious or internet subcultural interpretations.
This starter page is intended as a neutral reference entry. It can be expanded with history, beliefs, practices, symbols, texts, branches, notable figures, and related concepts.


== Key beliefs ==
== Related pages ==
 
* Reality may be computationally generated or simulated
* The apparent world may conceal deeper layers of reality
* Creators of the simulation may be interpreted as godlike beings, programmers, ancestors, or unknown intelligences
* Awakening, escape, or understanding can become spiritual motifs
* Critics argue that simulation claims are often unfalsifiable or speculative
 
== Practices ==
 
* Philosophical discussion of the simulation hypothesis
* Meditation on illusion, code, and awakening
* Creation of symbolic diagrams or cosmologies
* Study of The Matrix and related media in some circles
* Ethical reflection on agency within systems
 
== Places of worship ==
 
* Online communities
* Study groups
* Private meditation space
* No standard place of worship
 
== Sacred texts ==
 
* Philosophy papers on simulation
* Science fiction and cyberculture texts
* Matrixist writings in related movements
* Personal essays and manifestos
 
== Holidays and observances ==
 
* No universal calendar
* Film or publication anniversaries in some groups
* Community-defined awakening observances
 
== Branches and related traditions ==
 
* [[Matrixism]] - A related popular-culture-inspired religious movement.
* [[Artificial Intelligence Theism]] - A related category when AI or posthuman beings are imagined as creators.
* [[Gnosticism]] - An older religious category sometimes compared to simulationist themes of illusion and awakening.
 
== See also ==


* [[Religion]]
* [[Religion]]
* [[Theology]]
* [[Theism]]
* [[Religious symbols]]
* [[Religious concepts and ideals]]
* [[Philosophy of religion]]
* [[Philosophy of religion]]
* [[New Religious Movements]]
* [[Unaffiliated and Secular Worldviews]]
* [[Technotheism]]


[[Category:Religions]]
[[Category:Secular and unaffiliated worldviews]]
[[Category:Technology and religion]]
[[Category:Technology and religion]]
[[Category:Religion]]



Revision as of 20:00, 22 May 2026

Simulationism

Simulationism is a worldview or philosophical-spiritual idea centered on the possibility that reality is simulated, designed, computed, or nested within artificial worlds.

Overview

This starter page is intended as a neutral reference entry. It can be expanded with history, beliefs, practices, symbols, texts, branches, notable figures, and related concepts.