>>40789451
>Every variation of any moment actually already exists simultaneously when you're beyond time and space.
Nope.
You don't understand eternity.
I like to explain it by using the extension of Pi, because it contains all permutations. For the sake of argument, imagine that it's neverending to the left of the decimal point, or whatever.
Anyway, so you imagine "beyond time and space" like a cube in a layer above where a dimension allows you to peek at everything that happened and will happen.
The trap you fall into is that a cube has ends, there's a start at the left of the cube and it ends at it's right. It's also limited by the top and bottom. For this to work you'd need to expand the cube in all directions, an eternal cube that never ends, oh, but then you'd be inside this cube on this layer, what happened to being outside time and space?
Another way to think about it is to realize that pi has any long string of 1s that you want, but the 1s can't be never ending because eventually a different number follows.
This means that in eternity there's the longest string of 1 that has ever happened, eventually this strong happens, but there's an extra 1, so it's the longest string now.
And that happens with 2 too, and with any other number. And if you write pi in base 11, there's a string of Xs that has never happened, and in base 12, a string of Ys that never happened.
Imagine pi being written in base eternity and you'll understand why new things that have never happened before have to happen by force all the time, so you can't know them in advance in a layer on an extra dimension, or any dimension above. Not even infinite dimensions would suffice because you can always have a string of 1s that is longer that the last one that has happened, by an extra 1.