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140 results for "third law" — page 1 of 7
ZA_4_02 — Thermodynamics: Laws, Heat Engines, and the Nature of Energy
Thermodynamics — the science of energy, heat, and work — is one of the most universal and robust frameworks in all of physics. Its four laws govern everything from steam engines to black holes, from chemical reactions to
ZF_5_05 — UNCLOS and Ocean Governance: Maritime Law, EEZ, and High Seas
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), adopted in 1982 and entering into force in 1994, is the comprehensive legal framework governing all uses of the world's oceans — often called the "Constitutio
ZB_5_17 — Constructal Law & Flow Architecture: Why Nature Branches the Way It Does
Most fractal descriptions of nature are descriptive: they observe that rivers branch like blood vessels, blood vessels branch like trees, trees branch like lightning bolts, and lightning bolts branch like river deltas. A
ZC_3_06 — Sociology of Law
Sociology of law examines law not as an autonomous system of rules but as a social institution — shaped by power, culture, and economic relations, and in turn shaping social life. Émile Durkheim (The Division of Labour i
P_5_20 — Cicero: Roman Oratory, Natural Law, and Republican Philosophy
Marcus Tullius Cicero (106–43 BCE) — Roman statesman, orator, philosopher, and lawyer — stands as one of the most influential figures in Western intellectual history, bridging Greek philosophy and Roman practice, and tra
P_2_16 — Philosophy of Law: Natural Law, Legal Positivism, and the Foundations of Justice
The philosophy of law (jurisprudence) addresses the fundamental questions: What is law? What is the relationship between law and morality? What makes a legal system legitimate? and how should judges decide difficult case
ZE_3_16 — Taboo Foods and Sacred Dietary Laws: Cosmology of Eating
No aspect of human life is more universally regulated by religion and culture than eating. Every known society has food taboos — categories of substances that are forbidden, restricted, or ritually controlled — and many
ZE_3_13 — Ocean Ethics — Maritime Law, Marine Rights, Ocean Governance
Ocean ethics examines the moral and legal governance of the world's largest ecosystem — the ocean covers 71% of Earth's surface, contains 97% of the planet's water, and produces 50% of the oxygen we breathe, yet remains
ZE_1_12 — Comparative Legal Philosophy — Sacred Law Across Cultures
Comparative legal philosophy examines how different civilizations ground law in sacred or metaphysical foundations, producing legal systems that differ fundamentally in their relationship between human legislation and tr
ZA_4_19 — Cryogenics and Low-Temperature Physics
Cryogenics — the production and behavior of materials at temperatures below ~120 K (−153 °C) — began with Heike Kamerlingh Onnes (Leiden), who first liquefied helium on July 10, 1908, reaching 4.2 K and opening the ultra
A_1_11 — Ebla Tablets and Third-Millennium Syrian Archives
The Ebla tablets comprise approximately 17,000 cuneiform tablets and fragments discovered at Tell Mardikh (ancient Ebla) in northwestern Syria between 1964 and 1975 by an Italian archaeological team led by Paolo Matthiae
A_1_13 — Hittite Treaties and Legal Tradition: From Hattusa to International Law
The Hittite Empire (c. 1650–1178 BCE), based at Hattusa (modern Boğazköy, Turkey), produced one of the richest legal and diplomatic archives of the ancient world. Over 30,000 cuneiform tablet fragments recovered from the
W_4_05 — Iroquois Confederacy and the Great Law of Peace
The Haudenosaunee (People of the Longhouse), commonly known as the Iroquois Confederacy, created one of the world's oldest continuous systems of participatory governance, uniting five — later six — nations under the Grea
Q_1_11 — Cosmological Redshift and the Hubble Law
The discovery that distant galaxies' light is systematically shifted toward longer (redder) wavelengths was the first observational evidence that the universe is expanding. Vesto Slipher's spectroscopic measurements (191
G_2_07 — Power Laws, Scale-Free Networks, and Ancient Systems
A power law is a mathematical relationship of the form $P(x) \propto x^{-\alpha}$ in which the frequency of an event is inversely proportional to some power of its size — meaning that small events are extremely common, l
Y_5_03 — Pineal Gland / Third Eye Across Cultures
The pineal gland sits at the geometric center of the brain and has been called "the third eye" across cultures for millennia. Ancient pine cone motifs appear at the Vatican (Cortile della Pigna), Assyrian reliefs (winged
P_2_17 — Philosophy of Law: Jurisprudence and Legal Theory
Jurisprudence — the philosophical study of law's nature, authority, and relationship to morality — addresses foundational questions: What makes a rule a "law"? Is law necessarily connected to morality? How should judges
ZE_2_15 — Christian Ethics: Natural Law, Liberation Theology, and Social Gospel
Christian ethics — the moral tradition shaped by Jesus's teachings, biblical interpretation, and theological reflection over two millennia — represents one of the most influential and internally diverse ethical tradition
R_1_13 — Archaea: The Third Domain and Extremophilic Diversity
Archaea constitute the third domain of life — neither Bacteria nor Eukarya — recognized as a distinct lineage by Carl Woese and George Fox in 1977 through revolutionary 16S ribosomal RNA phylogenetic analysis. For decade
ZA_3_02 — Symmetry, Noether's Theorem, and Conservation Laws
Emmy Noether's 1918 theorem established one of the deepest principles in physics: every continuous symmetry of the action of a physical system corresponds to a conserved quantity. Translational symmetry in space yields c
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