20100823 Coslor, Justin M. Doubt, Hope, Fact, Belief, Decisions, Risk, Priorities, and Reactions Doubt is a form of fear because it is motivated by the decision to interpret fear as a framework of negative or harmful belief about facts or impressions. Hope is a form of positive belief about helpful possibilities that are noticable from deciding to interpret facts or impressions in optimistic frameworks of belief. Facts are verifiable, and are provably verifiable in many contextual frameworks of perceptual interpretation and review. Beliefs are decisions. Decisions of priorities and formalized interpretation methods exist in every context. There are many reasons for everything. Unknown contexts always exist because a set cannot map its powerset, and so there are always unknown possibilities. Risk is about how far into the unknown that one goes with each step, and is a product of unidentified priorities. Some of the most common priorities are related to sustainability, stance, and strategy. Reactions come from expectations.