Siam:
In Islam, God DOES NOT have a "multiplicity of eternals"---which was the point of the mutazali/ashari perspective...that was mentioned in the other thread.
---which you refused to understand because it didn't suit your argument.
This is what you said on the other thread...
"Tawheed is very simple---It says there is One God---thats it----there are no "degrees" to Tawheed---it cannot be narrow or broad---there is only One God---even a child can understand it.......
The mutazili/ashari debates were not about Tawheed--both groups understood Tawheed perfectly well. The discussion about "attributes" concerned the concepts of "multiplicity of eternals" and revolved around understanding the relationship of God's "attributes" to God's "essence"(totality)within the framework of Tawheed."
They had different perspectives on this issue. The Mutazali thought that the Ashari perspective allowed for a "multiplicity of eternals" by saying what they said about the attributes. The Mutazali basically said that the Ashari perspective (which held that the Quran was uncreated) was tantamount to SHIRK.
The point of that matter is simply that, in Islam, it is not NECESSARILY against Tawhid to talk about diversity of distinctions...because that's exactly what the Ashari did. If diversity of distinction were completely disallowed from Tawhid (let alone just general monotheism), then the Ashari perspective wouldn't be what it is.
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Siam:
Also---God's attributes are NOT neccessarily TRIUNE----which from a Muslim perspective is limiting------also discussed in a previous thread......
As I discussed in that previous thread, I have NOT limited God's attributes to three. Formally speaking, God's attributes are innumerable. I made that very clear on the other thread, Siam. I've been saying that it's MEANINGFUL to talk about a necessarily triune
activity (Like Subject/Self/Subject-Self Relationship) that can be analogous to what is POSSIBLE in a simple monotheistic context. THAT's what the analogies are about. To demonstrate that saying that a singular activity CAN have diversity of distinction involving 3 necessary aspects to the event. It's NOT logically incoherent to talk about such a thing. Tell you what. If you just answer the questions FORMALLY, that would be helpful.
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Siam:
Simply put ... a TRIUNE God is NOT Tawheed.......and you can try till the oceans run dry---Muslims are not going to budge from Tawheed
You don't seem to get the point that there are Muslims who think that saying that the Quran is uncreated is NOT Tawhid. You really don't seem to get that.
Anyways, PLEASE just answer the two questions I have concerning the analogies. That's all I'm asking. Don't simply think of this in terms of Islam. As I said, I'm talking in a simple MONOTHEISTIC context, not necessarily YOUR view of Tahwid.
Let me get the questions again...
1) Are these analogies meaningful and coherent?
2) Are these analogical concepts logically viable within a simple monotheistic framework? (Note this is NOT asking what allowable for a particular religious context, Islamic or otherwise. This is asking about logical viability of the concepts given the belief in a singular, uncreated personal reality who originates Creation.)