Hi Stak,
We have to be careful here, there is a vast difference between saying (a) the possibility of a physical actual infinity versus (b) the physical possibility of an actual infinity. I take Craig to be claiming the negation (a) instead of (b), and the negation (a) is the much stronger claim.
I agree, but more specifically I think he is claiming the negation of the possibility of a physical actual infinity
within our present Standard Model universe that includes a temporal historical regress in real time. It is also my understanding that if David Hilbert is correct, then Craig does negate (a), but that is what I am seeking further clarity on.
and the concept of time isn’t something that we can talk about as if it has material constituents.
This is where I got somewhat confused. What do you mean time can't be talked about as a kind of material constituent? Do you mean it isn't real? I understand that a view of time corresponding to the notions of “real time” implied by contemporary physics (particularly the General Theory of Relativity) is just that. To my understanding science has revealed that time not only has real effects on motion, change, and energy emission, but also that motion, change, and energy emission had real effects on the measurement of time. Time isn't a mere accidental property of motion or a mere subjective quality imposed on motion by someone measuring it. Time has been found to be an ingredient to both change and existence. It is the necessary condition for change and motion and produces the effect of duration. A finitely small minimum possible interval of time, (“Planck time” (tp= 5.39 × 10-44 s) is just like space, or information and can be talked about just like matter. This is why Bergson, Whitehead, Prigogine etc.. theorized that something like a non-contemporaneous distensive magnitude (earlier-later) has to condition reality, which is in a state of changing, becoming, and even enduring. Existence is not mere facticity at an instant, but rather a non-contemporaneous distension allowing for everything from continual transition (becoming) to continual enduring (the real flow of time).
This definition of time makes events into a real non-contemporaneously distended, interactive, asymmetrically related whole. Then, this (what I at least understand to be the present state of Big Bang Cosmology and physics which Craig relies on) is utilized by Craig and he is supported by Hilbert (who coined the Cantor's paradise in the first place) who shows an actual infinity to be inapplicable to any reality to which the axioms of finite mathematics can be applied.
To my understanding, Hilbert attempted to clarify the notion of an infinite numeric series which was thought to exist as a completed totality:
Just as in the limit processes of the infinitesimal calculus, the infinite in the sense of the infinitely large and the infinitely small proved to be merely figures of speech, so too we must realize that the infinite in the sense of an infinite totality, where we still find it used in deductive methods, is an illusion. (Hilbert, On the Infinite)
Hilbert is speaking about C-Infinity's (the existence of a mathematical infinity within a finite or aggregative structure) the same that Craig speaks of. He states that it contradicts the very axioms of finite mathematics. He goes on to state that the Russell-Zermelo paradox presents so many contradictions that it undermined deductive procedure in finite mathematics, these paradoxes of set theory are what Craig bases his absurdities on.
I admit I don't have the mathematical acumen to mathematically follow the discussion, but the historical discussion seems to support Craig, at least from my current vantage point.
my regards, mikwut
All communication relies, to a noticeable extent on evoking knowledge that we cannot tell, all our knowledge of mental processes, like feelings or conscious intellectual activities, is based on a knowledge which we cannot tell.
-Michael Polanyi
"Why are you afraid, have you still no faith?" Mark 4:40