What do you mean by a “finite universe”—how are you using the word “finite”? A universe may be finite in duration, but there may be infinitely many possibilities for what the details of that universe are, even uncountably infinitely many.
As I already said, this may be possible. Wouldn’t a non-normal infinity of time and space be a hell of lot more surprising than a normal infinity, though? How would you even justify that as an assumption?
Already answered in post #60. Any quantized universe is finite.
I keep laying out exactly the assumptions I am making in this thought exercise. You’re free to make a case under different assumptions. But instead you keep saying that because your assumptions are different therefore I must be wrong. I wish you’d stop doing that.
I wouldn’t. I wouldn’t assume non-normality.
Why assume normality either, though? Why make an assumption one way or the other?