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SuaveSocialist said:
Peh said:

I'll just want to add something to this sentence here:

As long as this observer is not able to manipulate our universe, he will be able to see the future.

I came to the conclusion, that someone who can both, change the future and see it, won't be able to see the future he wants to change. He alone is the disturbance who makes it impossible to see it for himself.

That's simply because knowing the future, is what changes the future.

Unless a multiverse based (at minimum) on a Finite Curve exists within a singular continuum; then that person would be able to see all possible outcomes of all available choices.  That person's experiences would then be contained to a single pathway of causal action, yet the alternatives known and measurable.  Things get crazy by adding dimensions to our perception of Time and Space.

This would work on first sight.

But I have my doubts that these multiverses would be deterministic.

Also, at what point would these multiverses differ? At the moment a choice has been made by a human being? But when are choices being made?

While I try to represent the view of incompatibilism, this idea wouldn't work for me.



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