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Wes Morriston Craig on the actual infinite article In a series of much discussed articles and books, William Lane Craig defends the view that the past could not consist in a beginningless series of events. In the present paper, I cast a critical eye on just one part of Craig’s case for the finitude of the past - viz. his philosophical argument against the possibility of actually infinite sets of objects in the “real world”. I shall try to show that this argument is unsuccessful. I shall also take a close look at several considerations that are often thought to favour the possibility of an actual infinite, arguing in each case that Craig’s response is inadequate.

Craig on the actual infinite

Wes Morriston

Religious Studies, vol. 38, no. 2, 2002, pp. 147–166

Abstract

In a series of much discussed articles and books, William Lane Craig defends the view that the past could not consist in a beginningless series of events. In the present paper, I cast a critical eye on just one part of Craig’s case for the finitude of the past - viz. his philosophical argument against the possibility of actually infinite sets of objects in the “real world”. I shall try to show that this argument is unsuccessful. I shall also take a close look at several considerations that are often thought to favour the possibility of an actual infinite, arguing in each case that Craig’s response is inadequate.

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