There’s no problem with knowing of ‘unknowables’ at all. Except for you? One can logically know that unknowables exist. I’m sorry that this is too difficult a concept for you.
See above. This is already covered in previous posts, and has zero to do with my critique of the trinity. It’s a particularly simple concept-it’s just not one that is relevant to the discussion. Reread my posts–You will find absolutely zero reference to the trinity as an example of an “unknowable” in this sense of the term. You seem to be creating a strawman argument…whatever the case, you are certainly not responding with this point to anything I’ve said.
Do you know what the word ‘analogy’ is?
Yes, that’s how I was able to explain why “1 x 1 x 1” is a particularly useless analogy with regards to the trinity.
It’s not to say that this is what the Trinity is (exactly) but to show you that it’s possible for something to be the same, and different from something else at the same time
If that’s all you mean to claim, it is obvious and irrelevant at the same time.
Yes, it’s possible for this black dog to be the same as that black dog in the sense that both are black dogs. Likewise, this written number one is the same as the symbol 1 in that they both represent one, but different in that I typed them in two different places. What on earth has that got to do with the trinity?
Except that it shows that one can be the same as something else, but different.
Okay, but you are conflating “similarity in one respect” with “100 percent identical.”
The substance of God, in triune theory, is indivisible. Hence, the person of the son is not the same
kind of God as the Father…he is the exact same, 100 percent identical God. The son is the one God…ie, God and the Son are identical to each other.
At the same time, the Father and God are identical to each other.
Yet the Father and the Son are not identical.
See the problem? You are talking apples and oranges with 1’s and “same and different.” 1 is a token of a concept; the concept will always be separate from any particular example. A person in the trinity is the concept, and there is no such thing as a “God form” above and beyond the existence of that one God.
You are confusing yourself and using really bad analogies because, I suspect, you are not paying careful attention to what your words mean. I’m sorry, but it’s simply not possible to have a discussion on the trinity when your language is at the level of “same and different”. There is an entire theological lexicon that goes with the trinity, and its terms are precise…and there’s an equally precise language of reasoning that you should think about mastering if you want to make sense of this doctrine for yourself.