| ... II. The Framework ...values    paradoxes 
 
 
timedex|  | "Behold, the nations are as a drop of a bucket, and are counted as the small dust of the balance: 
behold, he taketh up the isles as a very little thing."  Isaiah 40:15 
 Space and Location
 
 Both science and religion are tied to places, and often to the same place or places.  
Yet it seems a paradox to discuss both of these relationships in context to place.  So it is logical that PLACE be one of the 
primary frameworks for understanding and for bridging the gaps between science and religion.  A good place to start an 
understanding the role of PLACE is to index PLACE(S), watching to see if resulting patterns turn space and location data 
into information, knowledge, or wisdom (see Infinite GridSM).
 
 Webster’s New American Dictionary defines space as:
 The same dictionary defines location as:a period of time;some small measurable distance, area, or volume;the limitless area in which all things exist and move;an empty place;the region beyond the earth’s atmosphere; anda definite place (as a seat on a train or ship).2.69
 Note the word place is used in both definitions, in a sense illustrating how 
location and space are subsets of each other.  To explore these relationships, this section considers cultures 
which considered space and location to be one-dimensional, cultures working with two dimensional concepts, 
cultures realizing three-dimensional physical space, cultures using N-dimensional conceptual space and 
mathematical space, and how each of these views of space and location can be integrated and understood 
better with models.situation, place;the process of locating; ora place outside a studio where a motion picture is filmed.2.70
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 |     infinite grid 
 -081-
 |