(01-29-2021, 12:13 AM)jafar Wrote: Having attended math classes where the concept of 'infinite numbers' were being discussed makes it easier for me to grasp the concept. If there's another God, totally separate, then a border need to be defined to make a distinction between God A and God B, which render both "God" to be no longer infinite in any dimension, but became finite in that specific dimension where the border between God A and God B is being defined.
This is why I never consider numbers going up because infinity becomes unbounded. I find it more useful to look at it in the other direction, as 1 approaching 0 in desired fractions.
Unity is the number 1, it is whole. Unity then gets divided (fractally) to a potential infinite degree. Except it doesn't have to either, it can divide in intervals (halve it, then halve it again, and again, either to a limit or forever). So if unity is 1, and can also incorporate infinity at the same time, it is both bounded and infinite. You want a second creator, well you have a separate unique entity/unity also of one, also infinitely divisible. They are parallel and can also interact or be independent simultaneously because of the infinite solution sets contained within that could theoretically mesh together at certain logical points.
When I think of unity (1), or the creation for that matter, I usually picture a sphere, smooth and non distinct, without character (pure and solid, completely unified). But if you choose to zoom in, you can see it's fractal makeup, and zoom in forever. But where ever you choose to freeze your zoomed in vantage point, that again looks like that unified sphere again, it is your set limit, or the smallest unit of information you can identify.
Another way of looking at the unity/infinity dichotomy, is digital vs analog. Digital is the unified character, analog is the transient character that you zoom in and out of between digital spaces. Like travel between 2 nodal points in time (digital), you could have infinite variability between those 2 nodes (analog space). It is also the difference between a wave (analog) and partical (digital). The analog wave may represent information thru time or space, but conversely the digital particle represents that same wave at a specific point in space or time.
(Note I'm super tired right now so I may read this tomorrow morning and edit it more coherently lol).