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Questions tagged [infinite]

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14 votes
7 answers
4k views

Does Intelligent Design (ID) entail an infinite regress of designers, and if so, is that problematic?

We can arrive at an infinite regress of designers as follows: Suppose that X is so complex that it's considered to show evidence of design. Accordingly, we infer that an intelligent designer must be ...
user avatar
13 votes
5 answers
834 views

Do all epistemologies suffer from the "regress of justifications" problem?

Aristotle describes the regress problem in his logical work Posterior Analytics I.2: b5. Some hold that, owing to the necessity of knowing the primary premisses, there is no scientific knowledge. ...
Geremia's user avatar
  • 8,260
9 votes
7 answers
3k views

Could there ever be evidence for an infinite being?

The God of Anselm is understood as "that than which nothing greater can be conceived." From this definition, God can be presumed to be omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent, perfectly free, uncaused, ...
Bryson S.'s user avatar
  • 201
8 votes
8 answers
5k views

Arguments against eternal return

I have encountered the concept of eternal return e.g. in reading about Friedrich Nietzsche (1844 – 1900) and Pythagoras (c. 570 – c. 495 BC). This is one formulation from Nietzsche's The Will To Power:...
Drux's user avatar
  • 1,674
6 votes
8 answers
3k views

Infinite past with a beginning?

I can conceive of an infinite past with a beginning. I can in fact represent this idea by a simple diagram, part analogical, part symbolic. So, to me, this idea is a logical possibility. I initially ...
Speakpigeon's user avatar
  • 8,366
6 votes
6 answers
548 views

Finite and infinite temporal duration

I am trying to wrap my head around different philosophical concepts of 'forever'. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe there to be three versions of 'forever' in terms of temporal duration: ...
Gareth Gilbert-Hughes's user avatar
5 votes
9 answers
1k views

How can God be temporal if he never began?

I was reading through this article and it says: What may be the dominant view of philosophers today is that he is temporal but everlasting; that is, God never began to exist and he never will go ...
Cannabijoy's user avatar
4 votes
4 answers
749 views

Can the PSR be true for everything except the universe?

There is something called the principle of sufficient reason: everything happens for a reason. I believe that everything happens for a reason because inductively, that has been the case every time. It ...
Baby_philosopher's user avatar
4 votes
4 answers
330 views

Why is infinite regress commonly discussed in the context of theology or metaphysics, when it implies a rather peculiar model of the universe?

I have witnessed infinite regress being used to "prove God as impossible" with the following objections: If god is the creator, who created god? If the universe needs to be intelligently ...
day care's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
199 views

Does Descartes conclude that imperfection implies perfection?

In the third meditation, does Descartes' knowledge of his limitations, or his imperfections, lead to his conclusion that there must be something limitless, something perfect? In his third meditation, ...
SwabianOrtolan's user avatar
3 votes
7 answers
2k views

How can one determine, and justify, that something is infinite?

Can infinite things be measured and known? Imagine you stood on a long rope, and in the distance, you see that the rope continues past your vision. The further you walk on it, the more rope seems to ...
Rafael Ferrer's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
348 views

Actual infinite vs. Potential infinite [closed]

I'm looking for bibliography about the problem of Actual infinite vs. Potential infinite. I would appreciate information about papers or books treating this problem deeply, philosophical and ...
Evangelion045's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
193 views

What importance, if any, do infinitesimals still have for philosophers?

What importance, if any, do infinitesimals still have to philosophers? It seems like many people are baffled by them. E.g., there's a slew of questions relating to Zeno on this site (not least by ...
user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
169 views

What does it mean for something to “break” infinite regress?

When it comes to the cosmological argument, proponents point out that a first cause is needed to stop an infinite regress of causes. In epistemology, foundationalism is used to break the infinite ...
user avatar
2 votes
4 answers
506 views

Doesn't infinite regress go backward forever? Is SEP wrong?

I have always understood infinite regress to mean going backwards forever. (Forever as in endlessly, not necessarily temporally). A model would be the negative integers, if we viewed them as a model ...
user4894's user avatar
  • 2,967

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