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Why an Infinite Past Cannot Exist

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The Grim Reaper Paradox, Hilbert’s Hotel, and the Case for a Finite Universe

The question of whether the past is infinite has long fascinated philosophers, theologians, and scientists. One of the most compelling arguments against an infinite past is the Grim Reaper Paradox, a thought experiment that reveals the logical impossibility of an infinite regress in time. Complementing this are other thought experiments, such as Hilbert’s Hotel, Thomson’s Lamp, and Infinite Dominoes, which expose the absurdities of actual infinities in reality. Coupled with insights from modern cosmology, historical philosophy, and theology, these arguments form a robust cumulative case for the necessity of a finite past and a transcendent cause for the universe.

The Grim Reaper Paradox

The Grim Reaper Paradox, popularized by Alexander Pruss, demonstrates the impossibility of completing an infinite causal sequence. Imagine an infinite number of Grim Reapers, each tasked with killing a person at a specific, progressively earlier time:

1. Grim Reaper 1 is scheduled to act at 1:00 p.m..

2. Grim Reaper 2 at 12:30 p.m..

3. Grim Reaper 3 at 12:15 p.m..

4. This sequence continues infinitely, with each Grim Reaper acting at half the interval of the previous one, converging toward noon.

By 1:00 p.m., the person must be dead because one of the Grim Reapers would have killed them. However, no specific Grim Reaper can be identified as the one who acted, since each has an earlier Grim Reaper that would have already killed the person. This creates a logical contradiction: the person cannot survive, yet no Grim Reaper is responsible for their death.¹

This paradox illustrates that actual infinities cannot exist in reality, as they lead to incoherent outcomes. The same reasoning applies to an infinite past, which would involve an infinite regress of temporal events. Such a sequence is not metaphysically possible, necessitating a finite beginning to time.

Hilbert’s Hotel: The Absurdity of Infinity

The Hilbert’s Hotel thought experiment, devised by mathematician David Hilbert, reveals the paradoxes of actual infinities in the physical world. Imagine a hotel with an infinite number of rooms, all of which are occupied. Despite this, the hotel manager can always accommodate new guests:

• If a single guest arrives, the manager shifts the occupant of Room 1 to Room 2, Room 2 to Room 3, and so on, freeing Room 1.

• If an infinite number of new guests arrive, the manager shifts the occupant of Room 1 to Room 2, Room 2 to Room 4, Room 3 to Room 6, and so forth, freeing all odd-numbered rooms.

While this scenario is consistent mathematically, it is metaphysically impossible. A hotel cannot be both “fully occupied” and simultaneously able to accommodate new guests. Applied to time, this paradox highlights the absurdity of an infinite past, which would require “completing” an infinite sequence of moments to reach the present.²

Thomson’s Lamp, Infinite Dominoes, and Other Absurdities

Additional thought experiments further expose the incoherence of actual infinities:

1. Thomson’s Lamp: Imagine a lamp that is switched on and off an infinite number of times in a finite period, with each interval halving in length (e.g., one second, half a second, a quarter second, etc.). At the end of the finite period, is the lamp on or off? The result is indeterminate, showcasing the impossibility of completing an infinite sequence within a finite time.³

2. Infinite Dominoes: Picture an infinite line of dominoes stretching back into the past. For the final domino to fall (representing the present), an infinite number of prior dominoes must have fallen. However, completing an infinite sequence is impossible, meaning the present moment could never arrive.⁴

3. The Infinite Bookshelf: Imagine a bookshelf with an infinite number of books, each labeled with a unique number. If you remove the first book, the sequence of books would remain infinite, yet paradoxically, it would still lack the first book. This further illustrates the absurdity of applying infinity to real-world scenarios.⁵

Philosophical and Historical Context

Philosophers have debated the impossibility of an infinite past for centuries:

Aristotle distinguished between potential infinity (a process that can continue indefinitely) and actual infinity (a completed set). He rejected actual infinity in nature, aligning with the paradoxes discussed here.⁶

Thomas Aquinas argued in his Summa Theologica that “there cannot be an infinite regress in efficient causes.” Without a first cause, the chain of causation collapses, as there would be no basis for subsequent causes.⁷

Al-Ghazali, a medieval Islamic philosopher, emphasized the impossibility of traversing an infinite sequence to reach the present, a core tenet of the Kalam Cosmological Argument.⁸

Scientific Evidence for a Finite Past

Modern cosmology confirms the philosophical conclusion of a finite past:

1. The Second Law of Thermodynamics: The universe is moving toward a state of maximum entropy. If the universe were infinitely old, it would have already reached this state. Instead, the current low-entropy state indicates a finite beginning.⁹

2. The Borde-Guth-Vilenkin Theorem: Any universe that has been expanding throughout its history must have a beginning. As Alexander Vilenkin states, “There is no escape; they have to face the problem of a cosmic beginning.”¹⁰

3. Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR): The discovery of the CMBR supports the Big Bang Theory, which indicates a singular starting point for space and time.¹¹

Theological Insights

The impossibility of an infinite past aligns with Scripture, affirming the finite nature of creation and the eternal nature of God:

Psalm 90:2: “Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever you had formed the earth and the world, from everlasting to everlasting you are God.”

Genesis 1:1: “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.”

Revelation 22:13: “I am the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end.”

These passages underscore that the finite universe depends on an eternal Creator who exists outside of time.

Addressing Counterarguments

Critics often propose alternatives to a finite past, such as:

1. The B-Theory of Time (Eternalism): This view holds that all moments in time exist equally, negating the need for a beginning.

Rebuttal: The B-theory contradicts our intuitive experience of time’s flow and undermines causality, which requires a sequential progression of events.¹²

2. An Oscillating Universe: Some suggest the universe cycles infinitely between expansion and contraction.

Rebuttal: Such models fail due to entropy. Each cycle would lose usable energy, making infinite oscillations impossible.¹³

Conclusion

The Grim Reaper Paradox, Hilbert’s Hotel, and other thought experiments vividly demonstrate the absurdities of an infinite past. Supported by philosophical reasoning, historical insights, and scientific evidence, the case for a finite universe is overwhelming. This conclusion aligns with the Kalam Cosmological Argument, affirming the necessity of a transcendent first cause—one that many identify as God.

If time had a beginning, what does that mean for the universe’s ultimate cause? Could an eternal Creator provide the most reasonable explanation for existence itself?

Footnotes

¹ Alexander R. Pruss, Infinity, Causation, and Paradox (New York: Oxford University Press, 2018).

² David Hilbert, as discussed in William Lane Craig, The Kalam Cosmological Argument (London: Macmillan, 1979).

³ James F. Thomson, “Tasks and Super-Tasks,” Analysis 15, no. 1 (1954).

⁴ William Lane Craig and James D. Sinclair, “The Kalam Cosmological Argument,” in The Blackwell Companion to Natural Theology, ed. William Lane Craig and J.P. Moreland (Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009).

⁵ Alexander R. Pruss, Infinity, Causation, and Paradox.

⁶ Aristotle, Physics, trans. R.P. Hardie and R.K. Gaye, Book III, Part 6.

⁷ Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica, I.Q.2.Art.3.

⁸ Al-Ghazali, The Incoherence of the Philosophers, trans. Michael Marmura (Provo, UT: Brigham Young University Press, 1997).

⁹ Roger Penrose, The Road to Reality: A Complete Guide to the Laws of the Universe (New York: Vintage, 2007).

¹⁰ Alexander Vilenkin, quoted in John Barrow, The Universe That Discovered Itself (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000).

¹¹ Alan Guth, The Inflationary Universe (New York: Perseus Books, 1997).

¹² William Lane Craig, Time and Eternity: Exploring God’s Relationship to Time (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2001).

¹³ Ibid.

4 responses to “Why an Infinite Past Cannot Exist”

  1. Gary Adinolfi Avatar
    Gary Adinolfi

    While “science” indicates that the universe must have a finite beginning, the universe is a physical object. Meaning it’s something that exists. So one can always ask what became before this physical universe that perhaps caused the finite beginning of this universe.

    If nothing existed that seems to be paradox. Because how can nothing exist since it is not a physical entity by definition. So the first step would be to ask what exactly is “nothing” ? I don’t think there is any answer to that question, at least no answer that is within the realm of our comprehension.

    What say you to that ?

    Like

  2. Gary Adinolfi Avatar
    Gary Adinolfi

    By the way…..I agree about the fact that it’s metaphysically impossible to have an infinite past and I believe that proves the existence of God.

    Like

    1. tomstheologyblog Avatar

      Hi Gary, thank you for your comment. I appreciate the thought you’ve given this, and I’m glad we agree on a key point: that an infinite past is metaphysically impossible and that this points us toward the existence of God. That’s a crucial admission—one many skeptics avoid—but let’s unpack the rest of your comment to see where clarity is still needed.

      You wrote:

      “One can always ask what came before this physical universe… If nothing existed, that seems to be a paradox. Because how can nothing exist since it is not a physical entity by definition? So the first step would be to ask what exactly is ‘nothing’?”

      This is an important observation, but the confusion arises from treating “nothing” like it might be a kind of something. It’s not. “Nothing” isn’t a mysterious metaphysical substance. It has no being, no properties, no potential. Nothing is precisely no thing. So the question isn’t “how can nothing exist?”—that’s a category error. Nothing doesn’t exist. And that’s why the idea of the universe coming from absolute nothing is irrational. From nothing, nothing comes.

      This is exactly why we need something necessaryeternal, and uncaused—not just something that came before the universe, but something that explains why anything exists at all. That can’t be another contingent thing. It must be something outside the chain of caused things. In other words, a timeless, immaterial, powerful, and personal cause—what we call God.

      Let’s also remember:

      • If the past were infinite, we’d never arrive at today.
      • Scientific evidence (from the Borde-Guth-Vilenkin theorem, entropy, etc.) affirms a beginning.
      • Philosophical reasoning (like the impossibility of an actual infinite) confirms that beginning.
      • And metaphysics demands that something outside time and space initiated it.

      So while it’s good to ask what “nothing” means, the better question is: what kind of being must exist necessarily, without beginning, to ground all contingent reality? If we agree the past cannot be infinite, and the universe cannot come from nothing, then only one explanation remains: a necessary, eternal God.

      And that’s not just theological speculation—that’s reason following the evidence.

      Like

      1. Gary Adinolfi Avatar
        Gary Adinolfi

        I love these kinds of conversations that use logic to come to the ultimate conclusion. I knew I excelled in logic when I took a Philosophy course in college and breezed right through it with 4.0. It entailed basically the study of “if this then that”, in other words a course in logic. I also spent almost 30 years in Information Technology as a Systems Analyst which is totally based in logic. In fact, to qualify for the training course as a COBOL programmer I had to take a logic test which I scored 98%. But enough of patting myself on the back….lol

        Your logic in your reply was impeccable. There is no way to argue against it, which is why I think an atheist would just have to walk away…lol. As you correctly indicated, something cannot come from nothing. And nothing does not exist as a physical entity. So there has to be a beginning from something.

        To me, I don’t know how all of this can be explained without first admitting to the existence of God. The universe is just too grand a scale, and as you said, there had to be a beginning and that beginning cannot be from nothing.

        Since you are a Theologian, I have another question for you. The condition of this question has to be grounded in our experience here on Earth since we don’t know what else may exist in the universe. Given that condition, we know that things on Earth can be very cruel, and not just regarding human beings. Animals eat other animals alive for survival, for instance. That is just one example of the many cruelties of existence on Earth. We know there are many when it comes to the human race.

        So my question is this. Did God create the universe, and thus Earth, to be exactly the way it is now ? Or did God just create the conditions necessary for the universe to form and thus with it life on Earth ? Would love to know your take on that.

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