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How to Label Community Theory vs Evidence

Overview

Community theory can be meaningful and worth preserving, but it should not sit beside archival evidence without labels. This entry gives writers a simple standard for distinguishing records, interpretation, oral memory, spiritual reading, and claims needing review.

What this helps you learn

  • Community theory can identify questions, patterns, and lived meaning that deserve respectful review.
  • Sourced records, maps, archaeology, oral history, and spiritual interpretation each answer different kinds of questions.
  • Visible labels protect both community memory and historical evidence.

Careful claims

  • Do not present community theory as settled documentation.
  • Do not dismiss memory because it is not already in an archive.
  • Do not use spiritual or interpretive claims to certify legal identity or descent.

Research path

  • Create separate notes for record, memory, interpretation, and next source to check.
  • Use Community Notes for source leads and Fact Check for high-stakes claims.
  • Recommend wording that says what is supported and what remains open.

Evidence note: This starter entry is educational. Add sources, dates, maps, Community Notes, and Fact Checks as research develops.

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