I don't think we can say an "unbounded infinite of negations". That's really, a "bounded infinite of negations"
I can see an unbounded infinite negated, because an unbounded infinite is the base from which all bounded infinites are formed.
But if we say that all possible bounded infinites are negated, isn't that the same as stating an unbounded infinite is negated?
The best I can think of is that we must be able to make conceptualizations out of/within the unbounded infinite. Because if something could not, then nothing could create any sort of differentiation between bounded, and unbounded. Does this somehow fit within your PoR?
This again is where I have a hard time. Without a sqn, nothing can be. Which means without a sqn, concepts cannot be either. The way I read the essay and your explanation, it seems to imply without a sqn, the infinite, bounded or unbounded could not be.
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