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Does 'point of reference' make a difference?

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Does 'point of reference' make a difference?

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  1. If you mean "context," yes it does make a difference.

    "Context is a word that would have the meaning of the variable factors under which a situation happens. In this case, when Margaret Atwood?s ?Context is all? quote is kept into consideration, the variables would be Religion, Ethics and Science in order to help prove such a theory. "

    http://www.schoolsucks.com/10-context-is...

    "Concepts are not and cannot be formed in a vacuum; they are formed in a context; the process of conceptualization consists of observing the differences and similarities of the existents within the field of one’s awareness (and organizing them into concepts accordingly). From a child’s grasp of the simplest concept integrating a group of perceptually given concretes, to a scientist’s grasp of the most complex abstractions integrating long conceptual chains—all conceptualization is a contextual process; the context is the entire field of a mind’s awareness or knowledge at any level of its cognitive development.

    " If his grasp is non-contradictory, then even if the scope of his knowledge is modest and the content of his concepts is primitive, it will not contradict the content of the same concepts in the mind of the most advanced scientists.

    "The same is true of definitions. All definitions are contextual, and a primitive definition does not contradict a more advanced one: the latter merely expands the former."

    Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology; Ayn Rand

    Quotes about context:

    http://www.gaia.com/quotes/topics/contex...


  2. It serves as the absolute basis for the beginning of the development of our universal system.

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