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16 results for "judgment"
ZE_1_15 — Moral Luck: Nagel, Williams, and Fortune in Moral Judgment
Moral luck refers to the phenomenon that people are morally judged — praised or blamed — for factors beyond their control, despite the widely held principle that moral judgment should apply only to what is within an agen
A_1_05 — Divine Council / Assembly of the Gods
Virtually every ancient civilization describes a governing body of supernatural beings — a divine council or assembly — who collectively decide human affairs, authorize earthly kingship, create and destroy humanity, and
A_2_08 — Zoroastrian Influence on Abrahamic Religions
The proposition that Zoroastrianism fundamentally shaped the theological development of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam — particularly the concepts of cosmic dualism, Satan, angelology, bodily resurrection, final judgme
A_3_03 — Egyptian Book of the Dead and Funerary Literature
The Egyptian Book of the Dead (Pert em Hru — "Coming Forth by Day") is a collection of ~200 magical spells, hymns, and instructions designed to guide the deceased through the Duat (underworld) and into eternal life in th
C_5_04 — Zoroastrianism: The Demonization Pivot
Zoroastrianism (c. 1500–1000 BCE) introduced strict cosmic dualism — the absolute opposition of good (Ahura Mazda) and evil (Angra Mainyu/Ahriman) — and in doing so transformed serpent/dragon figures from ambiguous or po
K_3_08 — Intention, Volition, and Motor Consciousness
The neural basis of voluntary action and the timing of conscious intention relative to brain activity has become one of the most productive — and philosophically consequential — research programs in consciousness studies
ZC_1_11 — Psychology of Time
The psychology of time encompasses how humans perceive duration, orient themselves across past-present-future, and how temporal cognition influences decision-making, memory, motivation, and well-being.
T_3_06 — Psychology of Decision Making
The psychology of decision making — transformed by Kahneman & Tversky's heuristics and biases program (1970s) and formalized in prospect theory (1979, Nobel Prize in Economics 2002) — demonstrates that human judgment and
B_1_03 — Osiris — Death, Resurrection, and the Underworld Kingdom
Osiris (Egyptian: Wsjr, conventionally vocalized as Wesir/Usir) is one of the most important deities of ancient Egypt — the god who rules the underworld (Duat), judges the dead, and provides the template for resurrection
B_3_14 — Four Horsemen and Apocalyptic Entities: End-Time Beings
Apocalyptic entities — supernatural beings associated with the end of the world, the Last Judgment, and the cosmic battle between good and evil — populate the eschatological traditions of virtually every major religion.
P_3_10 — Skepticism and Pyrrhonism
Skepticism — the philosophical position that knowledge is uncertain, limited, or impossible — is one of the oldest and most persistent currents in philosophy. Ancient Pyrrhonian skepticism (Pyrrho, ~360–270 BCE; Sextus E
P_4_01 — Death and the Afterlife Across Cultures
Every known human culture has developed beliefs about what happens after death — making afterlife cosmology one of the most universal features of human thought. The major frameworks include: judgment and reward/punishmen
P_4_14 — Maat and Ancient Egyptian Philosophy: Order, Truth, and Justice
Maat (also Ma'at) is the ancient Egyptian concept of cosmic order, truth, justice, balance, and righteous conduct that governed the universe, society, and individual ethics for over three millennia — from the Old Kingdom
P_2_15 — Philosophy of Emotion: Affect, Reason, and Moral Sentiment
The philosophy of emotion asks what emotions are, how they relate to reason and knowledge, and what role they play in moral life. The Western tradition has oscillated between two poles: Stoic/Kantian rationalism, which t
A_4_39 — Egyptian Book of the Dead: Funerary Texts, Afterlife Geography, and Judgment of the Soul
The "Book of the Dead" (Pert em Heru, "Coming/Going Forth by Day") is a corpus of ancient Egyptian funerary texts — spells, hymns, incantations, and illustrated vignettes — designed to guide the deceased through the Duat
T_5_22 — Heuristics & Cognitive Biases: Systematic Errors in Human Judgment
Heuristics are mental shortcuts that enable fast, efficient decision-making under conditions of uncertainty — and cognitive biases are the systematic errors that result when those shortcuts misfire. The heuristics-and-bi
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