Hornbein said:
His main enemy was Kronecker. K thought that infinity was a bogus concept, so naturally he didn't like what Cantor was up to. At the time even proof by contradiction was controversial.
This is from the Wikipedia article on Kronecker
"He criticized
Cantor's work on
set theory, and was quoted by
Weber (1893) as having said, "
Die ganzen Zahlen hat der liebe Gott gemacht, alles andere ist Menschenwerk" ("God made the integers, all else is the work of man.")."
This is from the Wikipedia article on Cantor
"The objections to Cantor's work were occasionally fierce:
Henri Poincaré referred to his ideas as a "grave disease" infecting the discipline of
mathematics,
[8] and
Leopold Kronecker's public opposition and personal attacks included describing Cantor as a "scientific charlatan", a "renegade" and a "corrupter of youth."
[9] Kronecker objected to Cantor's proofs that the algebraic numbers are countable, and that the transcendental numbers are uncountable, results now included in a standard mathematics curriculum."
and further down in the Wikipedia article
"Mathematicians from three major schools of thought (
constructivism and its two offshoots,
intuitionism and
finitism) opposed Cantor's theories in this matter. For constructivists such as Kronecker, this rejection of actual infinity stems from fundamental disagreement with the idea that
nonconstructive proofs such as Cantor's diagonal argument are sufficient proof that something exists, holding instead that
constructive proofs are required. Intuitionism also rejects the idea that actual infinity is an expression of any sort of reality, but arrive at the decision via a different route than constructivism. Firstly, Cantor's argument rests on logic to prove the existence of transfinite numbers as an actual mathematical entity, whereas intuitionists hold that mathematical entities cannot be reduced to logical propositions, originating instead in the intuitions of the mind.
[8] Secondly, the notion of infinity as an expression of reality is itself disallowed in intuitionism, since the human mind cannot intuitively construct an infinite set.
[59] Mathematicians such as
Brouwer and especially
Poincaré adopted an
intuitionist stance against Cantor's work. Citing the paradoxes of set theory as an example of its fundamentally flawed nature, Poincaré held that "most of the ideas of Cantorian set theory should be banished from mathematics once and for all."
[8] Finally,
Wittgenstein's attacks were finitist: he believed that Cantor's diagonal argument conflated the
intension of a set of cardinal or real numbers with its
extension, thus conflating the concept of rules for generating a set with an actual set.
[10]"