Fabrice Correia and Sven Rosenkranz (2015) have developed their own distinctive view of this theory.
Nothing has happened to the present by becoming past except that fresh slices of existence have been added to the total history of the world.
[1]This dynamic theory of time conforms with the common-sense intuition that the past is fixed, the future is unreal, and the present is constantly changing.
His main argument as outlined by Dainton is as follows:[2] In the 21st century, several philosophers, such as David Braddon-Mitchell (2004), Craig Bourne, and Trenton Merricks, observed that if the growing block view is correct then it must be to concluded that it is not whether now is now.
According to the growing block view, tense is a real property of the world so his thought is about now, the objective present.
He thinks tenselessly that his thought is occurring on the edge of being but is wrong because he is in the past; he does not know that now is now, yet how can one be sure they are not in the same position.