jdonn, on Apr 6 2009, 05:05 PM, said:
All this talk about the Hilbert quote, I found this on the wikipedia article of Hilbert's hotel:
Quote
Because the Hilbert's paradox is so counterintuitive, it has often been used as an argument against the existence of an actual infinity, for instance an argument for the existence of God posed by the Christian philosopher William Lane Craig is roughly as follows;
Although there is nothing mathematically impossible about the existence of such a hotel (or any other infinite object), intuitively no such object could ever exist, and this intuition is a specific case of the broader intuition that no actual infinite could exist. Since a temporal sequence receding infinitely into the past would constitute such an actual infinite, time must have "started" at some point. Since "time" cannot be started by any temporal thing, and every action must have a cause, this cause must be God.
I guess my question is, how can someone honestly believe intuition proves anything? Or even moreso, how it can disprove anything that is not mathematically impossible?
Maybe Wikipedia is not Being fair to Craig, but as described in the Wiki article the argument is total rubbish.
First, who says the World isn't absurd?
Second, who cares if it
would be absurd if someone got a room in a full hotel as long as it doesn't
actually happen although it was possible? For all we know we live in one of an infinity of universes, so even if each was constrained not to contain hotels with an infinity of rooms, there would still be an infinity of hotels in the whole multiverse.
Third (and this is most crucial), how can one extrapolate from hotel rooms to time? Even if Hilbert's Hotel cannot exist (which I disagree with, but OK), why can't there be an infinity of time points?
Fourth, who says everything has a cause?
Fifth, even if there is only a finite number of time points, who says one had to be the first? Why do they have to be strictly ordered?
Sixth, so the argument goes that God existed before time existed? Now this seems totally absurd to me! But wth, maybe the world is absurd, what do I know, maybe the flying spaghetti monster and several even more absurd gods actually exist!
Seventh, even if we accept that
something must be the cause of the beginning of time, I don't see how that
something has to have any resemblance to any of the gods conceived of by religion. It could be some quantum fluke that by an improbable accident turned on time in the hitherto timeless proto-universe. Or some angry geek pressing ctrl-alt-delete on the computer that runs Fluffy's universe-simulation-software. Or .....
I personally don't see how the existence of something in nature that must
necessarily be modeled by means of infinite sets could ever be confirmed. I find it more plausible that the non-existence of an infinite number of particles, or maybe even the non-existence of an infinity of points in spacetime, could be argued on the basis of experimental data.
However, such an argument would require insight in physics. Forming a firm opinion about such issues solely on the basis of an armchair argument is silly.
On the other hand, that spacetime is
most mathematically conveniently modeled by means of infinite sets, is beyond dispute.
The world would be such a happy place, if only everyone played Acol :) --- TramTicket