pointlessness
That sentence is not bafflegab. It is, however, completely wrong...Consider, for example, the rules that specify the context-free syntax of a programming language.
I read this to stipulate a programming language context. If you don't, why not?
Who would have stipulated that? I haven't. Have you? If so, where?
You made a general claim. Any counterexample refutes your general claim. That's critical thinking 101.
My first counterexample was Gödel's completeness theorem. When you wrote "Even if true", you revealed your ignorance of Gödel's completeness theorem. I then provided an entire class of mundane counterexamples drawn from the familiar world of programming languages (which, by the way, is closely connected to the world of logic and mathematics).
It's possible, of course, that your general claim wasn't intended to be general. You phrased it as a general claim, but you often say things you later reject as misinterpretations of or irrelevant to your position.
By the way, why do you write so much about matters you later claim are irrelevant to your position? I have no idea, for example, why you think your "stipulate" question could have any bearing on your position or mine.
(Pro tip: When you ask irrelevantly silly questions, or express doubt ("Even if true") about well-known facts, you can appear quarrelsome.)
Most of your claims seem quite silly to me: Whether true or false, they seldom advance your argument.
In this case, I think you were still trying to pretend you understood some basic idea of Gödel's incompleteness theorems, even within a post in which you disclaimed real knowledge of those theorems and revealed complete ignorance ("Even if true") of Gödel's completeness theorem. But why?
For that matter, why did you drag Gödel into this conversation at all? You did so because you thought his incompleteness theorems somehow supported your claim of undocumented assumptions creating risk that's somehow related to the risk of vector math you hallucinated. All of that has been thoroughly debunked, yet you cling to your conviction that quaternions are somehow safer, based on your own (clearly uninformed) reading of "experts" you have never named or cited. You are now on the defensive about Gödel, but you have only yourself to blame for that. Had you not tried to attach your argument to Gödel's prestige through name-dropping, your ignorance of Gödel's theorems would never have come to light.
And why did you drag Quine into this conversation? You didn't know about his rejection of the analytic/synthetic distinction, and you cling to a grotesquely distorted view of his theory of underdetermination. With such a poor understanding of Quine's philosophy, what did you hope to accomplish by dropping his name?
You're still dropping names, but they're becoming more and more obscure. In your recent posts, you've mentioned Kassler six times, apparently because you believe he/she is an authority on Quine. To give you some idea of Kassler's obscurity: a Google search on "Kassler"+"Quine" yields
this thread as the top hit.
It's possible, of course, that you misspelled this person's name all six times.
(Pro tip: Misspelling the names you drop does not create an impression of superiority or competence.)