You mistake my claim, which is that the spiritual is unreasonable. In matters of fact, truth and reason are king and queen; in matters of faith, beauty and goodness. What extraordinary folly to be reasoning whether there is one love or three or three in one - there is no love, therefore one must believe in it. — unenlightened
That might be a fair characterization of Geach's motivation for coming up with the thesis of the relativity of identity. But that would be a bad mischaracterization of Wiggins' thesis of the sortal dependency of identity since the purpose of the latter was to disentangle the philosophical insight embodied in Geach's flawed thesis from Geach's own motivation to salvage a particular Christian doctrine. — Pierre-Normand
There certainly were triads of gods and goddesses and they may have influenced the conception of the Trinity. Early Christianity assimilated a great deal.↪Ciceronianus the White Triple Goddesses occur in many religious belief systems, some long-predating the Christian Trinity. The concept doesn't seem unusual or novel. :chin: — Pattern-chaser
the thesis, which I know nothing about. What I find interesting is the belief that it's necessary to find a way to account for the text--in this case, the belief that although the Trinity seems to make no sense, it must make sense, so we must find a way for it to make sense, and the only way to do that is to provide an explanation which is lacking in the text. This tells us something about the text and — Ciceronianus the White
Early Christianity assimilated a great deal. — Ciceronianus the White
I don't understand what you're saying, in that case. As for the Gospel of John, it like other parts of the Bible contains language which made it necessary to come up with the concept of the Trinity. If Jesus is one with the Father, how can he be the Son? Did the Father die on the cross? If Jesus is the Father, does that mean Jesus existed before he was born?My whole point on apostolic tradition was in ref to this. Your own point below on the quote from John also seems in contradiction to your point above. — Rank Amateur
since triune (where 3=1) is illogical and contradictory on its face. — Hanover
Well, no. What's illogical would still be illogical, and what's contradictory would still be contradictory. We've defined what those words mean, you see, and have no "God Logic" to refer to for different definitions. What you're claiming is that God isn't bound by the rules of logic, and can be "contradictory" (e.g., something and something else at the same time, I suppose).Unless you can prove that something as small as human logic would be binding upon something as large as a god, then gotchas like "illogical" and "contradictory" are basically meaningless. — Jake
Well, no. What's illogical would still be illogical, and what's contradictory would still be contradictory. — Ciceronianus the White
What you're claiming is that God isn't bound by the rules of logic, — Ciceronianus the White
My guess would be this claim wouldn't impress many atheists. — Ciceronianus the White
I think that's an excellent position. It was the position of Immanuel Kant, a devout theist who essentially said that we were incapable of doing any reasoning about God.To be more precise I'm claiming that it has not been proven that a God would be bound by the rules of logic. — Jake
Trinities are everywhere.
The following one looks perfectly logical to me. — andrewk
My response is that it is impossible to interpret the 'est' to mean 'equals', because the equals relation is transitive and the est relation in the diagram is non-transitive. — andrewk
I think that's an excellent position. It was the position of Immanuel Kant, a devout theist who essentially said that we were incapable of doing any reasoning about God. — andrewk
It does however mean that any statements of belief in the trinity, or indeed about any aspect of God whatsoever, must be acknowledged by those making them to be pure items of faith, not reasoned as they are so often presented to be. — andrewk
You don't need to convince me that all humans rely on faith. David Hume demonstrated that conclusively in the eighteenth century. Hume was accused of being an atheist, and many these days suspect he was, but of course he did not say so, as doing so at the time was tantamount to suicide.THEISTS: Are holy books the word of God? There is no proof, so such a claim is faith.
ATHEISTS: Is human reason applicable to everything everywhere? There is no proof, so such a claim is faith.
See? Both sides are doing the same thing, accepting the validity of their chosen authority without proof, as a matter of faith. — Jake
You don't need to convince me that all humans rely on faith. — andrewk
It does however mean that any statements of belief in the trinity, or indeed about any aspect of God whatsoever, must be acknowledged by those making them to be pure items of faith, not reasoned as they are so often presented to be. — andrewk
The Trinity was the primary subject of the First Council of Nicaea, presided over by Constantine. — Ciceronianus the White
How many things do your see? Three? But that means not counting the middle circle; Four? then it's not a trinity. One? Then whence the division?
Nothing sensible can be said about the trinity. — Banno
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