On Sat, Dec 8, 2012 at 3:50 PM, Julian Leviston <jul...@leviston.net> wrote:

>
> "a" reason, not "reason". Note I didn't say "reasoning comes before
> processing". I meant "a reason to do something" surely must come before and
> inform "a process to do". As in... the point of doing what you're doing.
>

Yes, I understood that. But it is not a significant difference whether you
use reason as a noun or verb. As a noun, reason is oft discovered in the
doing, or inspired in the exploration.

-- 
bringing s-words to a pen fight
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