Addendum:
Time and the Soul on Eärwa
So, something interesting came up in discussion. That is, the lingering question of how it could be that Yatwer, eternal, can see "all of time" yet, cannot see the failure of the White-Luck Warrior. Or of Sorweel. In what manner can we reconcile the following facts:
First, Yatwer (and so the rest of the Hundred) are Eternal, that is, they are outside of time. They do not age and they are no subject to the laws of time. That is, Yatwer can "experiance" all time which She exists in. This would be how She can "see" the White-Luck Warrior kill Kellhus. We shall return to this point soon.
Next, despite the fact that Yatwer sees all of time, there are two (at least two) very specific things that Yatwer (et. al.) cannot see. That is, the No-God, and Ark. By extension, this includes Kelmomas.
Third, despite Kelmomas being unseen, he is still part of the same time as Yatwer.
Fourth, that all of time is already "written." That is, all things that will happen have already happened.
So, we are left to ask the following: if Yatwer can "see" all of time, at least all of "time" in which Yatwer exists, then how is it the case that Yatwer cannot see little Kel, or at least, see little Kel's influence on things She can see?
To simplify our task, we can simply take for granted that the No-God is simply outside of what Yatwer can perceive. We need to burden ourselves with an explanation of this fact at this moment (in fact, we will return to it at the end). What we do need to ask though is what does this make of what Yatwer does see? In other words, if time includes the No-God, which it must, as the No-God indeed happens, then what is it that Yatwer saw, which did not include the No-God?
Let me attempt a sort of visual example:
If we liken all of time, that is, everything that ever happens in and on Eärwa as a book, we can imagine, for example, the "passage" of the following progression: 1,2,3,4. What do I mean here? Well, if we continue the analogy of "a book" then, we can have pare 1, which begets page 2, and then page 3 and so on. Each page builds upon the previous page. This is to liken the passage of time as a linear progression, toward whatever the future is. The key on Eärwa, of course, is that the whole book has already been written. That is, all pages are written. In a manner of thinking about it, then the whole book, that is, the litany of all things that have happened, is already written or set, as it were.
We are left then, to ask, how can it be that Yatwer can see all of time, that is, see the whole book, and yet not see the failure of the White-Luck Warrior? It would be no different than, us, the readers, being able to read the whole series, yet, not be able to see the ending. No, something else must be happening.
What I propose, of course, is that Yawer (et. al.) cannot "see" all of time. They cannot "read the book" of all time. What Yatwer actually does is follow the lines of causal, experiential data and in doing so, extrapolates the seemingly deterministic end. This is not "reading the book" however, because were it, there would be clear points at which the intercession of the No-God would clearly be changing things from what Yatwer would expect. So, what seems must be the case is that Yatwer only imagines Herself to be reading the book. In reality, what is actually being done is intuiting the outcome of System: Eärwa, based off it's previously known (i.e. "beginning") state. This works, only insofar as Eärwa is a closed system. But Eärwa is not closed: it was breached by Ark.
This is similar to how Moënghus the Elder, imagined Eärwa closed and able to be rendered predictable. Except he was wrong. Now, the Hundred have perspectives well beyond what Moënghus could muster, being a-temporal and nearly omnipresent. But they too are wrong to assume that this part is the whole. While the Hundred are outside of time, they are not truly Eternal, since they were born, so shall they die. And while they are nearly everywhere, they are not everywhere and so there are gaps in what they can "see." The Ark is just one notable instance of this. However, the Hundred, perceptually, are blind to what they are blind to. So they have no but to imagine that the part they intuit, that is "see," is the whole, the whole whole.
So, then time as perceived by the Hundred is not time as it is on Eärwa. Time, as percieved is time as it "should be" were it to follow Eärwan "laws" (yes, even sorcery, as a law outside of "natural law") and proceed accordingly. But that Hundred don't "see" this, so much as they simply intuit it. In a similar manner to how a bird tracks prey. It doesn't think, or calculate, it just does what it knows it needs to do. Yatwer is not a consciousness in an anthropomorphic way. This is why the Mutilated even say to Kellhus that the Hundred couldn't have known of their absence, they could only intuit it. Considering though, that the Hundred don't have actual eyes, this "intuition" is what to them is "seeing."
I am thinking that possibly the whole reason why the No-God even works at all is because, like the soul is a ledger, so is "time" on Earwa. It has dimension. So the god's can "see" it all, because they can look back and forth along the "line." But the No-God, as a sort of singularity, collapses this dimensionality. So, under the No-God there is no past, in any discernible, ledger-like way, there is only the present, devoid of any connection with what was done, or will be done. In this way, it doesn't matter what you do, or did, because in the next moment, it's all new and nothing bears any connection with what was before. You are, in a way, born new, every moment upon every moment. This is the union of Subject and Object. Subjectively you are nothing but an Object, bereft of greater consequence. Maybe this is why souled things can't be born, because soul, as the signifier of "that which animates," cannot be, so you are born without the "animator," that is, just an object.
Of course, then we are left to ask how is it that soulless things can be born at all. The answer is, I guess, that since that is their nature, it does no harm for them, as they are naturally already in that state of already being just Object.