Man dies, discovers We're Living in SIMULATION and Reality Is An ILLUSION
What Researchers Found
The Story
R. Moors, a man living alone in Canada, experienced an NDE while sleeping in his apartment. He had wished for death during hard times and felt his organs shut down suddenly. During the NDE, he saw his body in bed and entered a tunnel in a van with others. He heard his mother's voice declare them dead, then felt a pinch in his heart like a TV shutting off. He entered a void and viewed Earth as a distant stage, where a voice told him to bow and say goodbye as an actor in a simulated play. He felt peace, love, and floated with a large presence, but worried about his family and fiance. He approached a massive gate but chose not to enter, fearing no return. He returned to his body like falling from a height. After the NDE, Moors valued spirituality, friendships, and knowledge over material things. He saw Earth as an experimental planet for learning and shared his story in a book.
“love and happiness and joy I was calm I was not nervous I was like I didn't see”
The primary veridical claim involves remotely perceiving a specific phrase uttered by the experiencer's mother in Florida ('Oh no, we are dead') while dying in Canada, offering strength in medical severity, access impossibility, specificity, and unpredictability. However, the complete absence of any verification attempts, confirmed verifications, or documented timely reporting caps the evidential strength at moderate.
Score reflects verifiable perceptions reported. A low score indicates the experience was primarily spiritual or subjective, not that it didn't occur.
Score reflects transformation as described. Domains scored 0 indicate the topic was not discussed, not that no change occurred.
Are you here because someone you love has died?
These accounts were gathered because death may not be the end. Thousands of people have experienced something beyond — and come back to tell us about it.
What Researchers Found
The primary veridical claim involves remotely perceiving a specific phrase uttered by the experiencer's mother in Florida ('Oh no, we are dead') while dying in Canada, offering strength in medical severity, access impossibility, specificity, and unpredictability. However, the complete absence of any verification attempts, confirmed verifications, or documented timely reporting caps the evidential strength at moderate.
Score reflects verifiable perceptions reported. A low score indicates the experience was primarily spiritual or subjective, not that it didn't occur.
Score reflects transformation as described. Domains scored 0 indicate the topic was not discussed, not that no change occurred.