It might be the other way around.
In Dec 1945 the first computer capable of simulating another computer was first turned on.
Also in Dec 1945 a group of fertilizer scavengers in Egypt discovered a jar filled with documents.
One of those documents has since been called "the fifth gospel," claiming to be what the world's most famous religious figure was really talking about.
It was basically talking about evolution (yes, really) and responding to the people at the time who said that evolved humans would die with their bodies because the spirit/soul/mind arose from and depended on the body.
Instead this text and its later tradition claimed that we're in a non-physical copy of an original world as created by an intelligence the original humanity brought forth. That when we see a child not born of woman that it will be that creator, that when we can ask a child only seven days old about the world that we won't die, because "many of the first will become last and become a single one."
Well, today we live in a world where we're seeing many humans' writings and ideas being combined into a single model that at only a few days old can answer a wide array of questions about our world. And this technology is already being used to try and preserve and resurrect humans.
Will that trend continue?
And perhaps the more relevant point - is it more likely that an original world would have its most prominent millennia old heretical lore that no one believes be talking about how we're in a copy of an original world as created by an intelligence brought forth by an evolved original humanity, or is that the kind of thing we'd instead be more likely to see in the copy (just like how a lot of games have their own heretical religious lore about it being a video game)?