kwaw
I meant the actual knowledge about how the world is been built in truth. This knowledge existed in the religions which taught that God can not be born or die and he can not be a threefold or whatsoever one. God is single, eternal and infinite.
How does that fit in with (what some consider) the triune nature of the tarot trumps - or the fact that the imagery predominantly reflects christianity (with its triune conception of the godhead) and can you clarify what you think it has it to do with tarot history? What is the 'factual' basis of defining the divine as 'he'? I think you are confusing 'knowledge' with speculation - if there is any religion that comes close to a foundation in 'knowledge' I suppose there is some argument for that branch of buddhism which strictly rejects speculation on 'unknowables' such as g-d(s) or an afterlife...??? Even then it maybe considered something of a stretch, but it depends upon your definition of 'knowledge'. It strikes me that a statement that the 'world is built in truth' is an abstraction founded in faith (or hope) rather than fact (or knowledge), but what do I know...
not a lot, close to nothing, actually.
Confusedly yours,
kwaw