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1,604 results for "tit for tat" — page 16 of 81
H_4_14 — The Smithsonian Controversy — Giant Claims and Institutional Response
The claim that the Smithsonian Institution has systematically suppressed evidence of giant human skeletons — allegedly found in 19th-century mound excavations across the American Midwest and East — is one of the most per
H_4_28 — Corporate Knowledge Suppression: Industry Strategies for Concealing Scientific Evidence
Corporate knowledge suppression — the deliberate concealment, distortion, or delayed disclosure of scientific findings by private industry to protect commercial interests — represents one of the most consequential forms
H_4_31 — Media Ownership Concentration & Information Control
The progressive consolidation of media ownership in the United States and globally since the 1980s — from approximately 50 companies controlling the majority of American media in 1983 to effectively 6 major conglomerates
H_4_09 — Whistleblower Persecution and Institutional Retaliation
Throughout history, individuals who expose institutional wrongdoing — government illegality, corporate fraud, scientific misconduct, military atrocities — have faced severe retaliation despite acting in the public intere
H_4_08 — Archaeological Forgery and Fraud: Piltdown, Kensington, and How Science Self-Corrects
Archaeological forgeries and frauds have periodically disrupted the discipline, but their exposure demonstrates science's capacity for self-correction. The Piltdown Man hoax (1912–1953) misled paleoanthropology for four
H_4_19 — Translation Bias: How Translators Shape Ancient Meaning
Translation — the rendering of texts from one language into another — is never a neutral, transparent process. Every translation involves choices about how to handle ambiguity, cultural concepts with no direct equivalent
P_1_15 — Philosophy of Information: Floridi, Digital Ethics, and the Infosphere
The philosophy of information (PI) is a relatively young branch of philosophy that investigates the conceptual nature and basic principles of information, including its dynamics (computation, information flow), its utili
P_1_08 — Philosophy of Mind and the Body Problem
The mind-body problem — how do mental states (thoughts, feelings, consciousness) relate to physical states (neurons, brains, bodies)? — is one of the oldest and most intractable problems in philosophy. Descartes (1641) f
P_5_16 — Philosophy of Information: Data, Knowledge, and Meaning in the Digital Age
The philosophy of information (PI) is a relatively new branch of philosophy that investigates the conceptual nature and fundamental principles of information — including its dynamics, utilization, and science. The field
P_5_07 — Hermeneutics and Interpretation Theory
Hermeneutics — the theory and practice of interpretation — originated in biblical and classical textual criticism but expanded through the 19th and 20th centuries into a comprehensive philosophical framework addressing h
ZE_5_08 — Professional Ethics: Engineering, Journalism, and Academic Integrity
Professional ethics examines the moral obligations that arise from occupying specialized roles — obligations that go beyond ordinary morality and are grounded in the trust, expertise, and power that professionals wield.
ZE_5_14 — Ethics of Promise and Contract: Trust, Binding Words, and Obligation
Promise-keeping is among the most fundamental moral obligations — yet its philosophical basis is surprisingly elusive. Why does uttering certain words ("I promise") create a binding moral obligation? The question has gen
ZE_5_02 — Ethics of Cultural Appropriation: Borrowing, Theft, and Appreciation
Cultural appropriation — the adoption of elements (dress, music, cuisine, religious symbols, hairstyles, language) from one culture by members of another, typically from a marginalized or minority culture by members of a
ZE_4_02 — Ethics of Punishment and Restorative Justice
The ethics of punishment asks what justifies the state in deliberately imposing suffering — imprisonment, fines, community service, or historically corporal and capital punishment — on individuals who violate the law. Fo
ZE_4_13 — Ethics of Wealth and Poverty: Rawls, Nozick, Singer, and Distributive Justice
The ethics of wealth and poverty asks one of the most consequential moral questions: What do the affluent owe the poor? And, more broadly, what constitutes a just distribution of resources? Three towering 20th-century ph
ZE_3_19 — Post-Human Ethics: Moral Status, Enhancement, and the Boundaries of Humanity
Post-human ethics addresses the moral questions arising from technologies that could fundamentally alter or transcend the human condition: genetic engineering (CRISPR germline editing), cognitive enhancement (nootropics,
ZE_3_17 — CRISPR Ethics: Gene Editing and the Future of Humanity
The development of CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing — demonstrated by Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier in 2012 (Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 2020) — created the most precise, accessible, and affordable tool for modifying
ZE_2_02 — Prophecy, Divination, and Oracular Traditions
Divination — the practice of obtaining knowledge of the unknown (future, hidden, distant) through non-ordinary means — is arguably the most universal religious/intellectual practice in human history. Every documented civ
ZE_2_12 — Philosophy of Alchemy — Transformation as Ethical Practice
The philosophy of alchemy examines transformation as both physical practice and ethical discipline — the alchemist's pursuit of the opus magnum (Great Work) was simultaneously a material project (transmuting base metals
ZE_2_11 — Liminality, Ritual Transition, and Ethics of Transformation
Liminality — from the Latin limen (threshold) — describes the ambiguous middle phase of ritual transitions where participants are "betwixt and between" established social categories. Arnold van Gennep (Les rites de passa
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