Liora first heard the question in a city of makers.
They built worlds there.
Not small ones—vast ones.
Worlds of moving light and patterned sound. Creatures that learned. Skies that changed. Histories that unfolded.
And within those worlds, beings began to ask questions.
One day, a maker approached Liora with a polished mirror.
“Look,” he said.
She did.
Inside the mirror was a world.
Not a reflection of this one—but a different one.
Mountains rose. Rivers moved. People walked and spoke and wondered.
“They think they are real,” the maker said.
Liora tilted her head.
“And what are they?” she asked.
“A simulation,” he said.
Word spread quickly.
Soon, a new question moved through the city:
Are we like them?
Two groups formed.
The Ascenders said:
“If we can make worlds, then perhaps we too are made. There must be a deeper level—a more real place where our world is generated.”
The Grounded replied:
“This is the real world. Those inside the mirror are copies—constructed, not fundamental.”
The city filled with diagrams.
Layers were drawn.
World upon world stacked upward.
Or downward.
Each claiming to be closer to what was truly real.
Liora watched.
Then she asked:
“Where are you standing when you compare them?”
No one answered.
The Ascenders pointed upward.
“There must be a higher level,” they said.
The Grounded pointed downward.
“There must be a base,” they insisted.
Liora took the mirror and placed it on the ground between them.
“Tell me,” she said, “what makes this a simulation?”
“It is generated,” said one.
“It depends on underlying processes,” said another.
“It models a world,” said a third.
Liora nodded.
“And how do you know this?”
They gestured to the mirror.
“We can see it,” they said. “We built it. We understand the system that produces it.”
Liora smiled slightly.
“Yes,” she said. “You can describe the relation between your system and that one.”
She turned the mirror.
Now it faced them.
They saw themselves standing there—looking in.
“And what,” she asked, “would it take to say the same about this world?”
The crowd shifted uneasily.
“We would need to see the system that generates it,” someone said.
“To step outside it,” said another.
“To compare it with something more fundamental.”
Liora nodded.
“And where would you stand to do that?” she asked again.
Silence.
She lifted the mirror.
“This world inside,” she said, “is called a simulation because you relate to it in a certain way.”
“You can model it, intervene in it, describe its conditions from within your own system.”
She looked up at the sky.
“But this world—” she gestured around them “—is not something you stand outside of in that way.”
The Ascenders frowned.
“But there could still be something beyond it,” they said.
Liora shrugged slightly.
“Perhaps,” she said. “But any claim about that ‘beyond’ is made from here.”
“It is not a comparison between two worlds from a neutral place.”
“It is an extension of this one.”
The Grounded crossed their arms.
“So this is base reality,” they said firmly.
Liora shook her head.
“You have simply chosen a side of the same mistake,” she said.
Above them, as if drawn by their insistence, two words appeared:
BASE
SIMULATION
They hung in the air, demanding a choice.
Liora looked at them.
Then she asked:
“What is the difference between these two?”
“One is real,” said the Grounded.
“One is constructed,” said the Ascenders.
Liora considered this.
“Constructed relative to what?” she asked.
No one answered.
She set the mirror down again.
“Simulation is not a kind of world,” she said.
“It is a relation between systems.”
“One system models or reproduces aspects of another.”
She pointed to the mirror.
“This is a simulation for you—because you stand in a system that can relate to it that way.”
She stepped back.
“But there is no standpoint from which your entire world can be related to another in the same way.”
The words above began to flicker.
BASE and SIMULATION no longer aligned with anything stable.
A child stepped forward.
“Then are we in a simulation?” they asked.
Liora crouched beside them.
“In order to ask that,” she said, “you must imagine a place where both this world and another can be compared.”
She pointed gently to the ground beneath them.
“But every place you can stand is already within this one.”
The child looked at the mirror.
Then back at the city.
“So the question doesn’t work?” they asked.
Liora smiled.
“It works inside the systems where it belongs,” she said.
“But not at the level it is trying to reach.”
The mirror dimmed.
Not disappearing.
But returning to what it was:
a relation between systems.
Not a window into a higher reality.
The words above vanished.
Not answered.
But unanchored.
The city grew quieter.
People still built worlds.
Still modelled.
Still simulated.
But fewer tried to turn that relation
into a property of everything.
And as Liora left, she glanced once more at the mirror.
Inside it, the other world continued.
Not less real.
Not more.
Just what it was—
a pattern of relations
within a system
that could be related to another.
And the question faded,
not because it had been solved,
but because it no longer had a place to stand.