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Logical Context and Perspective Theory

A meta‑theory asserting that logic, reason, rationality, philosophy, and all formal sciences are fundamentally context‑dependent and perspective‑dependent. What counts as a valid inference, a sound argument, or a coherent system varies with the frameworks, purposes, and standpoints from which they are deployed. Classical logic is one tool among many; there is no single, universal Reason that transcends context. The theory explains why logical debates so often become clashes of incommensurable frameworks and why appeals to “logic” alone rarely settle substantive disagreements. It does not abandon rigor but insists that rigor must be appropriate to context and perspective.
Example: “She used the law of non‑contradiction to dismiss Buddhist logic; he invoked logical context and perspective theory to show that Buddhist logic operates in a different framework—not wrong, just different.”
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