Originally posted by Boxing Pythagoras
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[Change over time refers to the fact that a thing has different properties at one moment of time than it does at some other. Nothing about this requires the notion of temporal becoming.
We are talking about the state of a thing at time A compared to the state of a thing at time B. This is perfectly cogent even when times A and B are entirely coextant.
Who has ever said that moments don't exist? That's exactly the opposite of the B-Theory. In fact, that smacks of Presentism of the sort professed by William Lane Craig. On the B-Theory, there are a multitude of moments of time which are all coextant with one another, in exactly the same way that there are multiple positions space which are all coextant with one another.
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