Acausality
Acausality is the when is a character is completely transcendent of Causality (relative to any dimensional level or beyond dimensional reality) and aren't bound by its system entirely. A character doesn't have to do something for an effect to happen.
Acausality is a philosophical and metaphysical concept that challenges the traditional notion of cause and effect. In the context of causality, events or phenomena are typically seen as linked by cause-and-effect relationships, where one event leads to another in a predictable and deterministic manner.
Acausality, on the other hand, makes it that certain events or phenomena occur without being caused by any preceding event or without any discernible cause at all. In other words, acausality posits that some occurrences can happen spontaneously, independently, or in a way that is not governed by any identifiable cause or reason.
In quantum physics, acausality is particularly relevant when considering the behavior of subatomic particles. At the quantum level, particles can exhibit behaviors that appear to be random or spontaneous, with no identifiable cause for their specific actions. These phenomena are described using probability distributions rather than deterministic laws, and this unpredictability has led to debates about the nature of causality and determinism in the quantum realm.
Acausality is also explored in the realm of spirituality and mysticism. Some spiritual traditions propose the idea of non-causal or transcendent experiences, where certain insights, realizations, or mystical events happen outside the realm of ordinary cause and effect. These experiences are often described as being beyond the limitations of the rational mind and the conventional laws of nature.