Context must accompany all records.

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Purpose

This principle ensures that records remain understandable, lawful, and resistant to misuse. Without context, even accurate words can become misleading.

Principle

Context must accompany all records.

Meaning

A record is never only its content. It carries meaning through who spoke, where it occurred, when it happened, why it was said, and what authority or situation framed it.

Removing context weakens reliability and may change lawful interpretation.

Core Elements of Context

  • Speaker or source – who holds responsibility for the words.
  • Place – where the statement or event occurred.
  • Time – when it happened.
  • Purpose – why the statement or action took place.
  • Scope – what the record is meant to apply to.
  • Standing – what lawful authority was present.

Why Context Protects Law

  • Prevents fragments from being used outside their intended meaning.
  • Helps future generations understand circumstances, not just language.
  • Maintains relationship between knowledge and responsibility.
  • Limits outside reinterpretation.

What Happens When Context Is Lost

  • Words can be misapplied.
  • Authority may be falsely claimed.
  • Teachings may be treated as rules.
  • Temporary situations may be mistaken for permanent law.

Examples

  • Advice given for a specific dispute may not apply elsewhere.
  • A teaching for learners may be misread as a directive.
  • A note from discussion may be mistaken for a decision.
  • A historical account may be used as present authorization.

Safeguards

  • Attach contextual information to every record.
  • Mark uncertainty where context is incomplete.
  • Keep records near their originating house, clan, or lawful source where possible.
  • Encourage guided interpretation when context is complex.

Cross-references

Notes

Future work may include templates for minimum contextual information and standards for archival tagging.

Source Citations