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Martin Sallberg
- 20
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The standard argument for the claim that time "must" be an illusion is the metalaw problem, that asymmetry such as fundamentally irreversible time in which the future literally does not exist would allow the laws of physics to change and we have not detected any change of the laws of physics over time. Can the problem be solved by setting the laws of physics from just after the Big Bang to slowing down any change of the laws of physics in the extreme? So extreme that the 13,8 billion years that have elapsed since could not produce a sufficient change in the laws of physics to be detectable even by the best instruments we have today? Does anyone know if this is mathematically possible?