Originally Posted by 
stiggywiggy 
	 
Of course. I use words with meaning when discussing anything with   anyone. And as I said, I can used those words to discuss that which I   cannot define, i.e. my love for my wife, thus disputing the contention   that that which cannot be defined cannot be discussed.
 
No, I didn't. I said that I cannot define the love I had for my wife.
	
	
		
		
			From here, it looked like you used the word 'love'.
  Originally Posted by 
stiggywiggy 
	 
 I seriously doubt that others can DEFINE the love I had for my wife.
 At least that is an improvement from your recent absolute statements,
		
 
You're confused. I never made any absolute statements about love. I only spoke of the undefinability of the love I had for my wife.
 
  Originally Posted by 
stiggywiggy 
	 
 Originally Posted by 
stiggywiggy 
	 
Where  did I say you did? I asked you to explain the rationale behind  "that  which cannot be defined cannot be discussed" (or something like  that).  You told me to ask Kant. Did you forget that?
	
	
		
		
			OK. Thanks for the belated admission.
		
		
	 
Admission??? What are you talking about? Let me put my quote up again, so that you'll realize your error:
Where  did I say you did? I asked you to explain the rationale behind  "that  which cannot be defined cannot be discussed" (or something like  that).  You told me to ask Kant. Did you forget that?
Obviously no admission of squat.
 stiggy earlier: So now we have this: you did not  forget that I asked you to explain the rationale behind "that  which  cannot be defined cannot be discussed." You did not forget that in  answer to that, you told me to ask Kant. 
 
Does this mean that you cannot explain what you've asserted?
	
	
But you didn't.
	
	
		
		
			It is called 
ignosticism.
		
 
Sorry, but merely typing website addresses is not tantamount to your explaining what you asserted above. 
 
  
  Originally Posted by 
stiggywiggy 
	 
 None.  I also have no evidence to the contrary. Nor do you. If a creature  existed who lived all his life inside the hood of a car, he might  mistakenly think that the fundamental CAUSE of the car's motion comes  from the uncaused movement of pistons in a cylinder. That's because he  is unable to see a more fundamental cause: A FOOT ON AN ACCELERATOR.
 
	
	
		
		
			Bad analogy. The workings of an automotive engine are well understood,
		
		
	 
Bad comment. The hypothetical creature in my analogy lives under the hood and has no access to the accelerator. He definitely does NOT understand the workings of an automobile. Similarly, we have no access to any alleged transcendent realm unless something from that alleged realm reveals itself.
Originally Posted by 
stiggywiggy 
	
	
	
		
		
		
			
		
		
	
	
http://www.christianforums.com/t7608800-post59215931/#post59215931 You are hallucinating positing there.
 
	
	
		
		
			In post # 150: "They transcend the empirical realm". No 'if', no other qualifiers.
		
		
	 
No, definitions of words do not posit the reality of what those words define. If I tell you that the creature defined as an angel, has wings, I am hardly positing the existence of angels.
	
	
		
		
			BTW, what does "transcends" mean?
		
		
	 
Unbelievable. You've been commenting on a word for several pages now without even knowing what it means??
	
	
		
		
			how will you know if you don't answer the question? Superman or Batman?
		
		
	 
What on earth are you talking about?