Why Craig and Mooreland think that the existence of Hilbert’s Hotel would be absurd?
Why they think the absurdity of Hilbert’s Hotel implies that no actual infinite collection can exist? — jay232
Let's face it: Despite their seductive allure, we have no direct observational evidence for either the infinitely big or the infinitely small.
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Not only do we lack evidence for the infinite but we don't need the infinite to do physics. — Edge - 2014: What Scientific idea Is Ready For Retirement? - Infinity - Max Tegmark
I don't know why they think that. But if it's to be a thought experiment about the physical world, then we have no experimental evidence that there is, or can be, anything infinite. And what would such an experiment look like? How would it be measured? — Andrew M
I don't know why they think that. But if it's to be a thought experiment about the physical world, then we have no experimental evidence that there is, or can be, anything infinite. And what would such an experiment look like? How would it be measured?
— Andrew M
Same way as how we establish anything in science: that Earth is ~4.5 Gyr old ("How could you possibly know? Were you there?!"), that pulsars are neutron stars, etc. We develop models and evaluate their closeness of fit, simplicity, and other epistemic and scientific virtues. — SophistiCat
We can conduct experiments to determine a specific finite age of the Earth. But how would we test whether something was infinite in age, size or number as opposed to just really, really large? — Andrew M
If there is an infinite number of guests at the hotel already, then there are no more possible guests to arrive, because that would allow for the possibility of greater than infinite. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't remember ever coming across a claim that there's an operation we can perform on the naturals that can yield a greater infinity than it. — TheMadFool
The power set of the naturals. — jgill
Probably. But take for example the element of the power set of N: {2,6,7}. This could be interpreted as guest(2)->room(6), guest(6)->room(7),guest(7)->room(2). Kind of silly, I guess. — jgill
We can conduct experiments to determine a specific finite age of the Earth. But how would we test whether something was infinite in age, size or number as opposed to just really, really large?
— Andrew M
Obviously, not by counting or measuring directly. We don't hold a stopwatch to measure the age of the earth either - we use other measurements to establish theories in which the age of the earth is a bound variable. Same with the size of the universe: it makes a difference to the theories that we use to explain astrophysical observations - their accuracy, simplicity and compatibility with other well-established theories. You can't just arbitrarily choose a size without breaking a bunch of stuff. — SophistiCat
Whoever Craig and Mooreland are, they might wish to take a college-level course in mathematics. There’s no paradox that I can see here, only a metaphor for some bijections from N to a subset of N. — Olivier5
Hilbert's Hotel is absurd. Mind you, it's logically correct for the mathematician but it's impossible for something like Hilbert's Hotel to really exist. You can describe it on paper but it cannot exist in reality. Illustrations like these showed that the existence of an actually infinite number of things is impossible.
Now sometimes people react to Hilbert's Hotel by saying that these paradoxes result because we can't understand the infinite - that it's just beyond us. But this reaction is in fact mistaken and naive. Infinite set theory is a highly developed and well understood branch of modern mathematics.
These absurdities result not because we do not understand the infinite but because we do understand the nature of the actual infinite. Hilbert was a smart guy and he knew well how to illustrate the bizarre consequences of an actually infinite number of things. — Hilbert's Hotel and Infinity - William Lane Craig (from 4:30)
We have already seen that the infinite is nowhere to be found in reality, no matter what experiences, observations, and knowledge are appealed to. Can thought about things be so much different from things? Can thinking processes be so unlike the actual processes of things? In short, can thought be so far removed from reality? Rather is it not clear that, when we think that we have encountered the infinite in some real sense, we have merely been seduced into thinking so by the fact that we often encounter extremely large and extremely small dimensions in reality?
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In summary, let us return to our main theme and draw some conclusions from all our thinking about the infinite. Our principal result is that the infinite is nowhere to be found in reality. It neither exists in nature nor provides a legitimate basis for rational thought — a remarkable harmony between being and thought. In contrast to the earlier efforts of Frege and Dedekind, we are convinced that certain intuitive concepts and insights are necessary conditions of scientific knowledge, and logic alone is not sufficient. Operating with the infinite can be made certain only by the finitary.
The role that remains for the infinite to play is solely that of an idea — if one means by an idea, in Kant's terminology, a concept of reason which transcends all experience and which completes the concrete as a totality — that of an idea which we may unhesitatingly trust within the framework erected by our theory. — On the infinite - David Hilbert
That's the odd bit. As per Cantor, infinite sets can differ in cardinality i.e. one can be "greater" than the other. The only instance of that I'm familiar with is the set of real numbers, a bigger infinity than the set of natural numbers. Hilbert's hotel, the way it's formulated, seems to restrict itself to the set of natural numbers. In other words, the infinite set that matters in Hilbert's hotel is basically the set of natural numbers and I don't remember ever coming across a claim that there's an operation we can perform on the naturals that can yield a greater infinity than it. — TheMadFool
I dismiss Cantor as misunderstanding. — Metaphysician Undercover
It seems that Craig is following Hilbert (and others) on this, which is to make a distinction between the mathematical idea of infinity, which he accepts, and its existence in nature, which he rejects. — Andrew M
I've got one in my backyard. It's infinitely small — Metaphysician Undercover
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