I have been reading the recent discussion about whether "facts" can be "rational" or "irrational" http://www.askphilosophers.org/question/2829). Professor Rapaport suggests that philosophers use facts differently than most non-philosophers.  Facts, he says, "simply 'are'".  They are not like beliefs, which are more like sentences.  His statements have left me very confused.
The Earth is round.  Is that a fact?  
We all die.  Is that a fact?  Seems to me that it is.  And it's simultaneously a sentence.  I don't see how a fact can be anything but a sentence.
But suppose facts are not sentences.  They are situations.  One big fact would be the way the world is, I suppose.  A smaller fact might be the way my room is right now.  Fine, why can't situations be "rational" or "irrational"?  I think very often we come upon a situation and say things like "This situation is totally crazy", by which we mean, it is irrational.  As the questioner said, dictionary.com defines "rational" as "agreeable to reason". ...