User blog comment:Pelinal Whitestrake/About Aka, Lorkhan and broken Windows/@comment-11345660-20140209010228/@comment-11345660-20140211042218

Alright cool. It is a whales bone bridge. I can buy that Tsun could be Zenithar, but the process of comparing totems to gods are flawed, it being in the way that Alduin to Akatosh is not accurate in the Nordic Pantheon, in which they treat them as seperate entities, plus there are gods specific to the Nords original pantheon, like Dibella, and while I can now speculate Tsun is Zenithar, it leaves me with three theories. 1) Tsun is Zenithar, just Zenithar, not a shard of him, and the Nordic pantheon is the true one, (A strong case could be made for this, as we actually meet a physical god in Sovngarde). 2) Your theory about the shards is correct. 3) Given that some of the process in elimination and flaws in comparisons with different deities, plus the fact that Zenithar is still a god of reason and commerce rather than a nordic warrior and that the Nords regard Alduin and Akatosh as completely seperate entities, plus the fact that with the Daedra and Aedra, with whom many argue that the only difference between them was that the Daedra did not partake in the creation of Nirn, thus retaining their full power, why havn't any of them split into fragments as well? The closest we've come to that happening is Jyggalag turning into Sheogorath, but they were not physcially split apart and it was because of a curse. What exactly is the reason behind this split business? What causes it? So, therefore, with these questions left unanswered, I can conclude that all the deities mentioned are whole and not split into seperate personalties and that the existence of Tsun and other Nordic gods is simply a parable to the belief of all gods exist, either under same names, or by themselves.