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I think Ycobb was just using the number thing as a metaphor, to say that just as iterations of numbers can be infinite within finite boundaries, the differences between entire universes could also be infinite by accounting for infinitesimial fractional differences, such as a particle being a Planck to the left, or half a Planck, or 1/4, or whatever. It's kind of a Zeno's Paradox-like situation, but you can't really divide space up into a nice grid where some amount of space is so small that it couldn't be divided further.
Ultimately, though, I'm with Vax in saying that this discussion doesn't really go anywhere, or prove anything. Even if there were a finite number of possibilites for a given universe, the number of permutations, even for a single particle, would be so great as to be functionally infinite, as in, the finite number wouldn't matter because we wouldn't even be able to comprehend that number.
And regardless of whether the number of alternate universes, if they exist, is finite or not, an omniscient God would be able to understand all of them by definition. Even when you return back to this point, we're really just arguing about the definition of omniscience. God could have any level of power for all we know (yes, including zero). If someone says the God they believe in is omniscient, I don't see how it'd be easier to disprove than the idea of a God who isn't.
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