Our Simulated Digital Reality, True or False

This original article was drafted by WordPress, and when I started to edit it, the text disappeared. So I will reply to this question differently.
Where does the term “transhumanism” come from?Transhumanism was first coined by Julian Huxley in 1957. Huxley is a British biologist and philosopher who coined the term after using it for the title of an influential 1957 article.
1- Is Elon Musk a transhumanist?
Musk follows his futuristic visions and aims for humans to transcend into a more conscious and evolved species. Transhumanism became a recognised term and a focus of intellectual exploration.
2- Do transhumanists believe in God?
At its heart, [transhumanism] is a godless movement, ultimately justified by the belief in evolution. Those within the transhumanism movement seek to increase human mental, sensory, and physical capabilities, but this shows a failure to fully understand what it is to be human.
Could one of the great mysteries in cosmology be why we humans perceive the Universe primarily as composed of physical matter, rather than antimatter? Antimatter has inspired many supernatural tales, and the key to this mystery lies in the fact that antimatter is the opposite of matter, much like identical twins of the opposite sex.
While my speculation is not scientific, could it be that our physical reality is actually a copy of an antimatter reality? I have been exploring this idea through storytelling, using a plot-driven mystery centered around CERN and the discovery of an inter-dimensional portal leading to an antimatter universe.
My fascination with an antimatter universe began when I read “The Twelve Planets Speak” by Carl van Vlierden in the eighties, and this interest has stayed with me to this day. Scientists have predicted the existence of antimatter, yet no explanation has been provided for why matter inherently requires an inverse counterpart of the same mass but with an opposite charge. In virtual reality, however, matter produced through processing inevitably implies the creation of antimatter through anti-processing.
Ultimately, the concept of an ever-expanding digital matrix that may resemble Asimov’s universal machine seems inevitable— or does it?


