I promise I'm not being an ***. I have serious questions. If we're both talking about the same theory, then I remember seeing Morgan Freeman interview the main proponent of this theory of time. I seem to remember that this theory has not been widely accepted (which is fine). But I do remember having philosophical issues with its validity. I'm excited to be able to ask some questions of someone who understands it.
If we're talking about the same theory, then as I recall, there are no true causes and effects because there is no linear time. There is just an infinite number of eternal moments. Our minds (somehow) piece them together into the illusion of incremental, moment-by-moment experiences by some (here-to-for undiscovered) part of our brain.
If this is the case, and there is no true sequence, then how can cause and effect in fact be true?
If cause and effect is not, in fact, true but is instead only an illusion, then how did we evolve the bit of our brain that synchronizes the eternal moments into an illusion of incremental time? Because, obviously we did not traverse bits of time in a process of evolution.
Did we even evolve? If I am envisioning this correctly, then reality is not what we have historically experienced. Instead it is more like a 4-dimensional painting and all we're doing is seeing it one pixel at a time. So reality is just a static painting and nothing changes. There has been no progression, just a look at another piece of the same static.
So, tell me again how cause and effect still work? Tell me again how the scientific process still works when our perception is just an illusion? If it's all an illusion, then tell me again how a scientific process that tells us all is illusion can tell us truth?