On the other hand, things that are, as a rule, directly apprehended and familiar become subjects of judgment when they present themselves in unusual contexts: as forms, distances, sizes, positions when we attempt to draw them; triangles, squares, and circles when they turn up, not in connection with familiar toys, implements, and utensils, but as problems in geometry.
"How We Think"
John Dewey
Of one thing I am satisfied; that no man ever has, and I believe, no man ever can reconcile the change of the living and the resurrection of the dead recorded in Philippians and 1 Thessalonians with their respective contexts, so as to prove a general and immortal resurrection at the end of time.
"Twenty-Four Short Sermons On The Doctrine Of Universal Salvation"
John Bovee Dods
But these many and distinct passages of poetry issue from and run into contexts of prose unmistakable.
"Jeremiah"
George Adam Smith