Dear Ken,
You wrote: "I *think* this is what you're getting at when you imply that I can't both have 1) an all-at-once story about reality, 2) an updating-story about our states of knowledge, and 3) contextuality. You obviously can have 2) in an all-at-once story, just as you can have a computer in a block universe, so 1) and 2) are fine together."
I have to strongly disagree with this. In an all-at-once universe, where everything "pre-exists" and nothing "is", you really can't have an updating story about states of knowledge. I think Ian's right about that. The sequencing of your "updating story" still presupposes some sort of temporality. In an all-at-once universe, every instance of knowledge acquisition "pre-exists" as well, all at once. It's a set, not a sequence. You can try to define it as a sequence because of the "spatial" order, but the only way to get from one element to the next and "update" is in time. You can't have an updating sequence if the too-easily-smuggled-in fifth dimension that we know all about is *truly* singular--i.e. if the block doesn't exist, but really "pre-exists" *all-at-once*.
I know you know of the danger of conceiving of the block as an existing thing itself, because you've cautioned a couple of people about thinking that way in the comments here. I personally think it's the greatest and most common mis-conception that occurs when buying, hook, line, and sinker, into Einstein's relativity of simultaneity--which is why I spent so much of my (actual) essay discussing that. A block universe doesn't exist, whether one takes your view or mine on relativity and what constitutes an appropriate definition of "simultaneity".
The true all-at-once block universe can't in any way "update" because there's no temporality left in the description whatsoever--it's a purely mathematical model; a Lorentzian geometry that *isn't*. The alternative is that it's just a map of all the events that occur in reality--i.e. not a representation of reality itself, which is completely impossible to reconcile with reality, because something *is* updating.
The simplest alternative to the completely unrealistic model is to admit, as a first principle, absolute space, and therefore absolute motion and absolute simultaneity. This is completely consistent with the cosmologcal evidence anyway. For some reason, people get all hepped up about calling a cosmic rest-frame a "preferred" frame or a "privileged" frame. As my first post above indicates, this is complete nonsense and utterly ridiculous. The notion that the observers in such a frame are "privileged" supposes that all inertial observers should consider themselves as being "at rest"; that they can't stick out a measuring tape to use, that they conceive as "really moving" and use it to describe events. It's baffling that anyone ever bought the notion that the "man on the street" walking around considers himself to be at rest while the whole world just moves around him;--that two "men on the street" who walk towards each other will both think of themselves as being "at rest" while everything's moving around them, and that there's a day's difference in what they describe as happening "now" in Andromeda.
But that is *exactly* what the initial argument in your essay supposes.
Both men on the street are, however, thinking the same thing about what's at rest and what's moving around--and what they think is at rest is not a bunch of stuff in "space" that's orthogonal to their proper time axes; it's the Earth.
An absolute rest-frame is perfectly natural to understand, even if it's not the rest-frame of our everyday lives (the Earth) AND it's supported by the cosmological evidence--which is all that matters, because relativity theory tells us (i.e. due to the principle of relativity) that the physics has to work regardless of one's frame of reference and their associated preception/conception of "actual" motion; i.e., it tells us that we can do physics under the assumption that the Earth is "at rest".
Daryl
P.S. Thanks for saying you'd respond to my "mini-essay" above. I'm sorry it had to be so long. By the way, the two posts I left the next day are off-topic, and only meant to justify the claim in the first paragraph of my response, becasue I don't think you'd trust the claim as truly justified (sort of in the way that Leibniz saw Clarke's claim of appreciating and agreeing with the principle of sufficient reason as actually not being the actual case). Similarly, what I'm saying in this post is that while you're claiming that your conception of "an all-at-once block universe that updates" is only four-dimensional, and even though you understand that it's too easy to start thinking of it five-dimensionally, I think you do still have a five-dimensional perspective. Maybe you can show me why I'm wrong. I'm ready to listen, and I don't mean this in any disrespectful or insulting way--I just personally think it's impossible to think of otherwise, because the true four-dimensional view really is impossible to reconcile with an updating reality.