Could we be living inside a computer simulation?
Sent on a mission by her son to answer this existential question, Catherine Heymans throws all the physics she knows at the question. As the Astronomer Royal for Scotland she is used to creating giant maps of the universe, but what if all the ancient light that she has spent her career collecting is just a series of computer impulses in an elaborate simulation?
Assembling the facts, How to Design a Universe takes us on a journey to understand how one day we might simulate our own lives. Along the way it explores how the fundamentals of light and electricity underpin the world we see, the consequences of quantum theory, and how technological advances mean physicists can already creating their own simulated worlds and AI is a reaching a point where we can’t always tell what is real. Offering an engaging guide to the simulation hypothesis, Heymans shows how modern physics and technology combine to challenge our most basic assumption: that reality is real.
How to Design a Universe: The Science of Real and Virtual Worlds
By Catherine Heymans
An exploration of the simulation hypothesis through the lens of modern physics, questioning whether our reality is real or a sophisticated digital illusion.
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Imprint: Bloomsbury Sigma l Pub date: September 2026 l Format: 234 x 153mm l Extent: 304 pages l Word Count:About the Author
Catherine Heymans is Astronomer Royal for Scotland, the first woman to hold the title, whose research has been featured in the Guardian, Sunday Times, Telegraph, Daily Mail, Washington Post and New Scientist. She is a regular contributor to BBC radio and has made a number of TV appearances.



















