Context determines lawful use.
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Purpose
This principle explains that how a record may be applied depends on the circumstances from which it arose.
Principle
Context determines lawful use.
Meaning
A record cannot be used properly without understanding the conditions in which it was created. Speaker, place, time, purpose, and standing shape how — or whether — something may guide present action.
Use detached from context risks misuse.
What Lawful Use Depends On
- Who held authority at the time.
- Whether the situation is comparable.
- Whether the record was advisory or decisive.
- Whether witnessing confirmed outcome.
- Whether access permissions remain valid.
Why This Matters
- Prevents automatic or mechanical application.
- Protects the relationship between knowledge and responsibility.
- Helps avoid importing solutions into the wrong setting.
- Maintains continuity without freezing law.
Different Context → Different Use
A principle may:
- Teach in one situation,
- Guide in another,
- Or have no authority in a third.
Understanding the difference is part of lawful conduct.
Examples
- Emergency guidance may not apply in normal governance.
- Internal house discussion may not bind the Nation.
- Historical response to past harm may inform but not dictate modern action.
- Training materials may explain practice without authorizing it.
Risks if Ignored
- Authority may be wrongly extended.
- Conflict may arise from misapplication.
- External parties may claim certainty where none exists.
- Trust in records weakens.
Safeguards
- Compare present conditions to original ones.
- Seek guidance from lawful interpreters.
- Mark uncertainty honestly.
- Avoid treating records as universal templates.
Cross-references
- Context Must Accompany All Records
- Context Includes Speaker, Place, Time, and Purpose
- Records Must Identify Scope and Limitations
- Method Matters as Much as Content
- Recording Does Not Transfer Interpretive Authority
Notes
Future development may include tools for evaluating similarity between past and present situations.