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Soulewolf
Guest
Then everything that you have said is irrelevant, since if there is change, then there must be a necessary existential being that actualises the principle of change. It doesn’t make any difference whether it happens all at once or not; so long as it “happens”, your argument falls apart. We experience that relative aspect of the universe where change evidently exists and thus the principle of change applies. It makes no difference to say that if we look at the universe from some other dimensions we will not see change; because this is only true relative to that particular dimension or point or view; and does not apply to the existential ontological properties of the whole.
The relative nature of the universe does not apply to points of view OUTSIDE the universe. there is no other dimension. dimensions exist within the universe. this point of view is OUTSIDE the universe. Thus it could be said to be the ultimate view of the universe. that of the divine.
if you agree that the universe is static objectively, then relative views of the universe are secondary.Change is not an illusion; it is a real phenomenon of the universe that can only be perceived or experienced by beings from a specific the point of view of a particular dimension of the universe. But I agree that if we looked at the universe as a whole we would not see any change, but only because we would be viewing the universe from a point of view that included all the change that will ever exist in one moment.
objectively change does not exist. we only see a very VERY small portion of the universe.That is, this one small sliver of “time”, when in truth all parts of “time” are parallel to each other. What you view as change, objectively, always existed. Thus it is not change.