If you say it exists, then I accept it for the moment. Then I want to see the definition/argument. Zisensontar is just a symbol (a name space). It could be anything.
Twice "no".
1. I have no problem whatsoever to deal with a hypothetical, or to assume that a statement is correct for the sake of the argument. Au contraire, I think this is a valid and productive way of investigating the accuracy of a statement. E.g. it´s the first step of a "reductio ad absurdum". I use this approach all the time, and if you look back you will find that I have done that several times in this thread.
2. This is not the point or problem we have been discussing, anyway. The question we have been discussing was: What makes an axiom, and my position is: An empty word doesn´t make an axiom. An idea/concept (whether it is labeled or not) does.
What indeed I find myself unable to do is:
Agreeing or disagreeing (or being anything but indifferent towards) a verbal construction in which the keyword is undefined.
Such a verbal construction isn´t a (substantiated or unsubstantiated) statement, it isn´t accurate or inaccurate, it isn´t a theory, it isn´t a hypothesis, it isn´t an axiom, it isn´t even nonsense. It´s nothing but an empty verbal shell. I am unable to have an opinion about the accuracy of its content - because it doesn´t contain anything.
Well, unfortunately I don´t know what Zisensontar is supposed to be, either, and I have no argument.
I just brought it up because your position was that a verbal construction is an axiom already at a point when there isn´t even a definition to its keyword.
Furthermore, you said that from such an "axiom" everything else followed logically and necessarily. Now, you were the one who agreed with the "axiom" I quoted, so it´s up to
you to show what follows logically and necessarily from this verbal construction.
BINGO.

Exactly my point.
Even worse, it could not even be anything but a an empty word (i.e. not even a symbol).
Nothing follows logically and necessarily from the verbal construction "Zisensontar exists" because at this point "Zisensontar" has no idea/concept attached to it. It isn´t a statement, it isn´t an axiom.
Likewise, the verbal construction "God exists" (as long as "God" is an empty word without a concept/idea attached to it) isn´t an axiom and not even a statement. Nothing follows from it logically or necessarily.
An axiom is a concept, not a word. A word without meaning attached to it doesn´t allow for an axiom.
What I am trying to show you is that you have it backwards. Nobody needs a word like "Zisensontar" or "God", unless they want to communicate a concept/idea. The idea/concept is first.
Examples:
a. someone has the axiomatic idea that the universe must be created, hence there must be a creator entity, which he will call "God".
b. someone feels that morality is unsatisfactory when it is subject to subjective opinion. Hence he axiomatically creates the concept of a supernatural moral authority, which he may call "God".
c. someone feels that there should be an "objective" meaning/purpose to existence. Hence he will axiomatically assume a supernatural authoritative purpose-giver.
None of these properties (creator entity, moral authority, authority on the purpose of existence) follows naturally, necessarily or logically (or at all) from forming a word (be it "Zisensontar" or "God").
The assumed properties are the axiomatic assumptions.