Persona Classification Layer
Compare Personas
Pick two or more historical figures to set their attribute fingerprints, dimension-by-dimension evidence, and shared school influences side by side.
Hosea
God as wounded lover — faithfulness, betrayal, and the refusal to let go
Attribute Fingerprint
Rows where personas disagree are highlighted in gold. The full ontology grid (32 attributes) is shown.
| Attribute | Hosea |
|---|---|
| Time · Extent | Infinite |
| Time · Ontological Status | Substantival |
| Time · Grain | Continuous |
| Time · Freedom | Non-Deterministic |
| Time · Traversability | Linear |
| Time · Dimensionality | One |
| Time · Direction | Uni-directional |
| Space · Extent | Infinite |
| Space · Ontological Status | Substantival |
| Space · Curvature | implicit |
| Space · Dimensionality | Three |
| Space · Locality | implicit |
| Matter · Extent | Finite |
| Matter · Ontological Status | Substantival |
| Matter · Conservation | Conserved |
| Matter · Dimensionality | Three |
| Matter · Locality | Local |
| Observer · Time Instance | Single |
| Observer · Space Instance | Single |
| Observer · Knowledge Extent | Mediated |
| Observer · Knowledge Retainment | Total |
| Observer · Physicality | Embodied |
| Observer · Agency | Active |
| Observer · Number | Plural |
| Observer · Metaphysical Agency | Providential |
| Observer · Moral Authority | Divine-Command |
| Observer · Theological Method | Revelatory |
| Energy · Extent | Finite |
| Energy · Ontological Status | Substantival |
| Energy · Conservation | Conserved |
| Energy · Dispersibility | Irreversible |
| Information · Ontological Status | Substantival |
| Information · Cosmic Conservation | Conserved |
| Information · Personal Conservation | Conserved |
| Information · Granularity | implicit |
Dimension-by-Dimension Evidence
What each persona's writings reveal about their stance on each of the six dimensions.
Time
Hosea
Time is linear, covenantal, and oriented toward restoration. Hosea repeatedly invokes Israel's past — the Exodus, the wilderness, the early covenant — as the standard against which the present is measured. The future is not annihilation but return: "After two days he will revive us; on the third day he will raise us up, that we may live before him" (6:2). The historical orientation is restorationist rather than strictly eschatological.
Space
Hosea
Egypt, Assyria, the wilderness, and the land of Israel are theologically charged spaces. The land is a covenantal gift that can be lost: "They shall return to the land of Egypt, and Assyria shall be their king" (11:5). Space is real, geographical, and bound to moral condition.
Matter
Hosea
Grain, wine, oil, wool, flax — the material gifts of the land are from God, and Israel's sin is to credit them to Baal: "She did not know that it was I who gave her the grain, the wine, and the oil" (2:8). Matter is finite, conserved, and morally significant as gift.
Observer
Hosea
Hosea is an embodied observer whose own marriage becomes a prophetic sign-act. Knowledge of God (da'at Elohim) is the central epistemic concept — not abstract theology but intimate relational knowledge: "I desire … the knowledge of God rather than burnt offerings" (6:6). God's own observer-stance is that of a wounded lover who sees and remembers everything.
Energy
Hosea
Not theorised in physical terms. The energies Hosea invokes are relational: the heat of divine anger, the warmth of compassion, the destructive force of abandonment. "My heart recoils within me; my compassion grows warm and tender" (11:8).
Information
Hosea
The covenant is the primary informational structure: a binding agreement whose terms are known and whose violation is knowable. "My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge" (4:6) — the absence of covenantal information is itself catastrophic. God's word through the prophet is conserved and effective.
Internal Tensions
Where each persona's working synthesis strains against itself.
Hosea's deepest tension is between divine wrath and divine love, staged most dramatically in chapter 11: "How can I give you up, O Ephraim? … My heart recoils within me; my compassion grows warm and tender. I will not execute my burning anger" (11:8–9). This is not a resolution but a divine self-contradiction that the text leaves raw. The marriage metaphor itself generates tension: God as cuckolded husband risks both patriarchal violence (chapter 2's stripping imagery) and sentimental softness — Hosea holds both without synthesis.