Re: Theos-World A Question for the New Year
Jan 13, 2005 11:39 PM
by Cass Silva
Leon
I can imagine Absolute ad infinitum, if that is what you are saying.
Cass
leonmaurer@aol.com wrote:
Are you saying -- since one can imagine an infinite set of infinities (as
Cantor has proven mathematically) -- that there cannot be a singular "infinity"?
I'm sure, using Cantor's logic, that, if the "Absolute" represents some state
of pre Cosmic existence that contains the root of everything and every
possibility to infinite degrees of differentiation, then it must be infinitely
divisible into infinite numbers of Absolutes that each contain the root of
everything and every possibility.
Leon
In a message dated 01/11/05 7:07:59 PM, bartl@sprynet.com writes:
>
>leonmaurer@aol.com wrote:
>> Based on the original statement that "the Absolute is relative and the
>
>> Relative is absolute"... The Absolute (as the unchanging One) can only
>be relative
>> in its relationship with other absolutes.
>
> If there are other absolutes, then it is not The Absolute.
>
> Bart
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