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The Foundations of Finite Logic
- David Hilbert (1924): On the Infinite:
- Core Point: One of the greatest mathematicians in history concludes that while infinity is necessary for mathematical consistency, it is “nowhere to be found in reality.”
- Hilbert’s Lecture on the Infinite
- G.J. Whitrow (1961): The Natural Philosophy of Time:
The Physics of Quantized Spacetime
- Max Planck (1900): On the Law of Distribution of Energy in the Normal Spectrum:
- Core Point: The foundational discovery of the “Quantum of Action,” proving that energy and physical states are discrete and finite, not continuous and infinite.
- Planck’s Original Paper on Quantization
- Lee Smolin (2001): Three Roads to Quantum Gravity:
- Core Point: Explores the necessity of a “Discrete Geometry” of space, arguing that the universe consists of a finite number of information states.
- Smolin on Discrete Spacetime
The Paradoxes of the Completed Infinite
- Zeno of Elea (c. 450 BC): The Paradoxes of Motion:
- Core Point: Ancient proofs that infinite divisibility leads to a paralysis of reality, modern physics “solves” Zeno by proving spacetime is quantized and finite.
- The Paradoxes of Zeno
- William Lane Craig (1979): The Kalam Cosmological Argument:
- Core Point: While used in a theological context, Craig’s work provides a comprehensive logical defense against the existence of an “Actual Infinite” in a physical timeline.
- Craig’s Logical Defense of a Finite Past