Jesus Christ. We've been over this before Elijah. I have bachelor degrees in physics and math. I have a masters in physics. I proved all of this to you through that little e-mail exercise we did. And yes, one of the reasons I'm being hard on you is because you have a history of making inaccurate claims when it comes to physics.
I have taken multiple courses in cosmology, astophysics, and general relativity. I have attended many lectures about the universe and its expansion, the cosmological constant, dark matter and dark energy, etc. I know what I'm talking about.
First of all, I am not claiming space is infinite. As I said, there are two possibilities: finite (and will recollapse) and infinite (and will expand forever). Infinite appears to be the more likely possibility, especially since the expansion of the universe is presently expanding.
The term infinite doesn't have any ambiguity. I mean what you mean. The universe is infinite means that if you consider a straight path, then this path goes forever and there are new galaxies and such to be discovered along this path that goes forever and never ends.
When I say there are infinitely many particles in the universe (provided the universe is in fact infinite) I mean that there is no number you can specify that is larger than the number of particles in the universe.
This is not a new concept Elijah. Physicists have known all of this for over 70 years now. General relativity allows two possibilities. I can refer you to textbooks easier than I can find articles that lay out such a basic principle at this point. It goes without saying in the physics community.
Here, I typed in "universe is infinite" in google (something you could have done). The first two results from the astronomy departments at Cornell and UCLA make it abundantly clear that the universe can be infinite.
http://www.astro.ucla.edu/~wright/infpoint.html
http://curious.astro.cornell.edu/questi ... number=476
Will you give this up please? This is like trying to argue with someone who thinks "they'll think of something" with regards to PO.