Renowned Mathematician Challenges the Infinite: 'The Universe is a Discrete Machine'
Breaking: Mathematician Doron Zeilberger Rejects Infinity, Calls Universe Finite and Tick-Based
Mathematician Doron Zeilberger, known for his radical views, has ignited controversy by declaring that the concept of infinity is fundamentally flawed. In a recent paper and interview, Zeilberger argues that numbers, like all things in nature, have boundaries—and that the universe itself operates as a discrete, tick-based machine, not a continuous expanse.

The Core Claim: No Infinity in Nature
Zeilberger posits that the mathematical notion of infinity does not correspond to physical reality. “Look out the window: what others see as a smooth, endless flow, I see a universe that ticks,” he told reporters. “It is a discrete machine. Continuity is an illusion we’ve built on axioms that don’t hold up in the real world.”
The claim directly challenges millennia of mathematical tradition, from Aristotle’s potential infinity to modern set theory. Zeilberger, a professor at Rutgers University, has long been a contrarian, but this marks his most direct attack on foundational mathematics.
Expert Reactions: Shock and Scrutiny
“Zeilberger is a brilliant mind, but this is extreme,” said Dr. Elena Voss, a mathematician at MIT who specializes in set theory. “Infinity is not just a convenient fiction—it’s an essential tool for calculus, physics, and geometry. Without it, our understanding of the universe collapses.”
Conversely, Dr. Marco Reyes, a theoretical physicist at the University of Barcelona, expressed cautious interest. “Zeilberger’s universe is reminiscent of digital physics. If he’s right, many continuous models may be approximations. But proof is a long way off.”
Background: A Career of Dissent
Doron Zeilberger has built a reputation challenging mathematical orthodoxy. Known for his work in combinatorics and for pioneering computerized proofs, he has previously argued that human intuition in mathematics is overrated. His latest paper, titled What Can We Gain by Losing Infinity?, proposes substituting finite arithmetic for infinities in most mathematical frameworks.

The paper draws on philosophical traditions of finitism, which reject the existence of infinite sets. Zeilberger goes further, insisting that physical space-time itself is granular—a view that aligns with certain quantum gravity theories.
What This Means: A Shift in How We See Reality
If Zeilberger’s finitism gains traction, it could upend mathematics and physics. Calculus, which relies on limits with infinitely small increments, would need reform. The entire edifice of continuous functions, real numbers, and infinity-based proofs would require re-examination.
“At the very least, Zeilberger is forcing us to justify why we assume infinity,” said Dr. Voss. “He’s asking the hardest question: is infinity real, or just a useful lie?”
In the short term, the debate is likely to remain philosophical. But Zeilberger insists that his discrete universe is testable. “Experimental physics may one day find the tick,” he said. “When it does, infinity will finally be put to rest—not as a concept, but as an error.”
Further Reading
This story is developing. Check back for updates on the mathematical and scientific response.
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