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In reply to:Of course, one could say that God is unknowable in the intellectual sense but knowable in a transcendent mystical sense. Such a person could claim to be an intellectual agnostic and yet a believer, a theist.
In the immortal words of Oolon Colluphid, "well, that about wraps it up for God."
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Words not meaning what their etymologies suggest
TheFallibleFiend 12/19/2002 11:54 AM ![]()
Re: Words not meaning what their etymologies suggest
Faldage 12/19/2002 12:34 PM ![]()
Re: Words not meaning what their etymologies suggest
Alex Williams 12/19/2002 1:09 PM ![]()
Re: Words not meaning what their etymologies suggest
Faldage 12/19/2002 2:12 PM ![]()
Re: Words not meaning what their etymologies sugge
sjm 12/19/2002 8:07 PM ![]()
Re: Words not meaning what their etymologies sugge
Faldage 12/19/2002 8:12 PM ![]()
Re: Words not meaning what their etymologies sugge
sjm 12/19/2002 8:22 PM ![]()
Re: Words not meaning what their etymologies sugge
Faldage 12/19/2002 8:25 PM ![]()
Re: Words not meaning what their etymologies sugge
sjm 12/19/2002 8:59 PM ![]()
Re: Words not meaning what their etymologies sugge
Capfka 12/29/2002 5:42 AM ![]()
Re: Words not meaning what their etymologies sugge
milum 12/30/2002 12:39 AM ![]()
Re: Words not meaning what their etymologies suggest
musick 12/29/2002 5:50 PM
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