Infinity as a Floating Abstraction

Infinity As A Floating Abstraction

Treating "infinity" as an actual rather than a potential is an error (a floating abstraction)---there is no actual infinity.

"Infinite" does not mean large; it means larger than any specific quantity, i.e., of no specific quantity. An infinite quantity would be a quantity without identity. But A is A. Every entity, accordingly, is finite; it is limited in the number of its qualities and in their extent; this applies to the universe as well. As Aristotle was the first to observe, the concept of "infinity" denotes merely a potentiality of indefinite addition or subdivision. For example, one can continually subdivide a line; but however many segments one has reached at a given point, there are only that many and no more. The actual is always finite.[1]


  1. OPAR, pp. 31-32 ↩︎