T
TheLearner
Guest
I recently stumbled across something I don’t know if it is a proper representation of Christian trinitarian metaphysics, in Averroes’ “Incoherence of the incoherence”.
He writes as follows:
“(…) This is the doctrine of the Christians concerning the three hypostases in the divine Nature. They do not believe that they are attributes additional to the essence, but according to them they are only a plurality in the definition-they are a potential, not an actual, plurality. Therefore they say that the three are one, i. e. one in act and three in potency (?).”
So, did Averroes get it right, or did he misrepresent Christian teaching?
He writes as follows:
“(…) This is the doctrine of the Christians concerning the three hypostases in the divine Nature. They do not believe that they are attributes additional to the essence, but according to them they are only a plurality in the definition-they are a potential, not an actual, plurality. Therefore they say that the three are one, i. e. one in act and three in potency (?).”
So, did Averroes get it right, or did he misrepresent Christian teaching?