It seems to me that if you were going to create a universal simulation, you would do it because you wanted to see what would happen inside. And we humans have a rather strong attachment to existing, so we should try to continue that state of affairs as far as possible. Therefore, in this scenario, every human being would have a solemn duty to make the world as interesting as possible.
That seems to share some ideas with Neal Stephenson’s fictional religion of Kelx, as described in Anathem.
Thank you by the way, I had actually remembered about that as I was typing this up (In a sort of “Speaking of Religions with unusual premises...” way), but forgotten what it was called and who came up with it. I had speculated that it might have been from a Heinlein novel, since the half-remembered premise of “lone protagonist is saved from arctic peril and then gets to listen to someone politely explain their philosophy” sounded vaguely Heinleinish.
That seems to share some ideas with Neal Stephenson’s fictional religion of Kelx, as described in Anathem.
Ah. This one, I’ve read.
Thank you by the way, I had actually remembered about that as I was typing this up (In a sort of “Speaking of Religions with unusual premises...” way), but forgotten what it was called and who came up with it. I had speculated that it might have been from a Heinlein novel, since the half-remembered premise of “lone protagonist is saved from arctic peril and then gets to listen to someone politely explain their philosophy” sounded vaguely Heinleinish.