<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0">	<channel>		<title>How You Can Know with 100% Certainty That You Are Living in a Simulation Comments</title>		<language>en-us</language>		<link>https://facilitatoru.com/facilitation/how-you-can-know-with-100-certainty-that-you-are-living-in-a-simulation/</link>		<description>Comments from How You Can Know with 100% Certainty That You Are Living in a Simulation</description><item>
<title>Jim Shelgosh</title><link>https://facilitatoru.com/facilitation/how-you-can-know-with-100-certainty-that-you-are-living-in-a-simulation/#IDComment1124844492</link><description>Steve,  Thank you for sharing this perspective.  I have long been convinced that there is no absolute reality; it all depends on the observer.  By example, my corollary to, \&quot;If a tree falls in the forest,\&quot; is, \&quot;If a man says anything and there is no woman there to hear it, is he still wrong?\&quot;&lt;br /&gt; As a facilitator, and husband, I take the position that each participant is right, even if two of them appear to be in direct conflict. The task is to find out how they are each correct and integrate those diverse perspectives into the project at hand.  How can \&quot;Yes\&quot; and \&quot;No\&quot; both be correct?  Each is easily understood from within the simulation of the observer.  If we will listen and they will explain it, the picture is enriched for all.  Thank you for continuing to contribute to the Facilitation community. </description><pubDate>Thu, 10 Apr 2025 14:41:16 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://facilitatoru.com/facilitation/how-you-can-know-with-100-certainty-that-you-are-living-in-a-simulation/#IDComment1124844492</guid></item>	</channel></rss>