punshhh
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2010
- Messages
- 5,295
I've just been popping into and out of this thread occasionally, but I'm wondering whether the word you want, instead of "infinity," is the "transcendent." That seems more in line with what you're trying to say.
"Finite but bounded" means that it is limited in size, but has no edge. Our brains can't properly imagine curved 3D space, but the equivalent idea reduced down to two dimensions is the surface of a sphere.
The surface of a sphere is a two-dimensional object, but you can wander all over it and never come to an edge. The idea is that space is like that but three dimensions instead of two.
I most certainly don't mean 'transcendent" in this line of reasoning, this is strictly relating to physical matter.
I appreciate your reasoning about curved 3D space, however it should still have theoretical boundary of some description if it is finite, or it would be infinite.