I told you what it SIGNIFIED, a Cardinal number, whose value is 1+1+1
You are correct, it corresponds to items of a set ( such as the number of persons in the Trinity

)
But what it SIGNIFIES is it’s own reality. There is no greater reality than itself
Perhaps, to better answer your question, can you tell me how you view the term ‘signify’
How do you define that term?
I have given my definition, I would like to hear yours
Is not a set of numbers something other than the natural number ‘3’? In this instance, the cardinal number ‘3’ signifies something other than “its own reality”.
The number three is an adjective when used in the phrase “three persons”. ‘Three’ modifies the noun ‘persons’. In the teaching of the Trinity, what the noun “person” refers to is an “ineffable mystery, infinitely beyond all we can humanly understand”. As such, what is signified by the number three cannot be defined by limited human language for it
signifies what is ineffable. Thus, the earlier question: Three
what? What is it that the adjective ‘three’ truly signifies? If we cannot answer that question, how could we
know, as objective knowledge, that ‘three’ is the “absolute truth”? To be sure, we can believe it is a true belief, but we cannot
know it as the “absolute truth”. This is the essential disagreement.
From my perspective, this makes little practical difference, but to a person who believes they possess the “absolute truth” the difference is apparently quite significant. Why I believe it makes little practical difference (to me at least) is because I think what a person believes is the “absolute truth”, at least in this instance, is in fact
belief. However, when this belief is that one possesses the “absolute truth”, it becomes fundamentalism. There are then the negative aspects mentioned by Pope Francis.
I agree with your definition of finite, my point was that there was nothing in any of the defintions that I posted ( and there were three total) that showed no contradiction.
Brendan, “absolute” does not mean “finite”. ‘Limited’ and ‘unlimited’ are a contridiction when used together to describe the same thing, as would be the case in “limited unlimited truth”.
And I never claimed that they were synomous, in fact the very phrase that I used, “finite absolute truth” indicated that they are not synomous, but used the term finite to identify a particular subset of absolute truths.
What is a subset of absolute truths? I do not know what it might mean–particularly what it might mean in reference to the Trinity–but from what has been said it sounds like taking a limited (finite) amount from an unlimited amount (absolute).
YOU claimed the terms were contradictory and offered a definition of what the term ‘absolute’ meant.
I admit it. I did! And ‘absolute’ means something other than “limited”. It means “unlimited”.
Your definition had the term “complete and total; not limited in any way”, which is why I asked for the source of your definition. That did not appear in any other definition I was able to find. Was that your source?
Well, it was the Merriam-Webster dictionary, actually, and it traces its linage to Noah Webster himself!
Do you disagree with any of the common sources (Websters and Oxford) that I provided, along with a Catholic definition.
I would if it defined ‘absolute’ as ‘finite’.
Brendan:
Are they unacceptable for our discussion?
I think ‘limited’ and ‘unlimited’ are appropriate. It is how the Merriam-Webster dictionary defines the two words, and simplicity of definition is helpful in a discussion. To be honest, however, I see no point in continuing this discussion. With all due respect, the concept of a “finite absolute truth” makes no sense whatever to me, and I readily admit I do not and cannot know the “absolute truth” of the Trinity. And it really is of little or no practical importance for me since I consider the effort to know its “absolute truth” as futile. I think it would be a good thing if you reread the section in the catechism concerning the Trinity, beginning with CCC 251, and then gave some thought on what it is you are attempting to prove. I say this with intended charity.