If we know everything, there is no time. Because we know what is happened.
With time, it implies we do not know everything. This is the condition for free will, because the mechanism of free will is going from not knowing what will happen to knowing what will happen (which we call "making a decision"). Time only flows when the not-known becomes known.
(Of course, most people do not experience everything that happens in the universe as a "personal" decision, but this is a most unscientific claim since even reductionist science tells us that everything is connected and the processes that decide where you eat lunch is essentially the same that decides the lottery numbers.)
Now that we've put all the big traditionally esoteric pieces together, where does this leave computation? Why are there problems that seem to be hard to decide? What is significant about this process or ritual of knowing?
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