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ZE_5_13 — Ethics of Charity and Philanthropy: Effective Altruism and Duty to Give
The ethics of charity and philanthropy interrogates the moral obligations of the wealthy toward the poor, the effectiveness and legitimacy of charitable giving as a response to poverty, and the emerging movement of effec
ZE_4_05 — Ethics of Global Justice and Human Rights
Global justice asks what moral obligations individuals and states owe to people beyond their borders, and whether justice requires global institutional reform. Human rights — rights held by all persons simply by virtue o
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_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_3_03 — Animal Ethics and Rights
Animal ethics addresses the moral status of non-human animals and the ethical obligations humans have toward them — a field that has been transformed since the 1970s by philosophical arguments challenging the human-cente
ZE_3_04 — Ethics of Technology and Surveillance
Surveillance ethics addresses the moral implications of monitoring individuals and populations through technological means and the tension between security and privacy. The field draws on a long philosophical lineage — J
ZE_1_07 — Social Contract Theory
Social contract theory holds that political authority and moral/political obligations are grounded in an agreement — actual or hypothetical — among individuals to form a society and accept governance. The theory addresse
ZE_2_05 — Buddhist Ethics and Ahimsa
Buddhist ethics (sila) forms one of the three pillars of the Buddhist path (alongside meditation [samadhi] and wisdom [prajna]) and is grounded in the Four Noble Truths (suffering exists; it arises from craving; it can b
N_2_02 — Sufi Orders and Islamic Esoteric Traditions
Sufism (tasawwuf) is the mystical-contemplative dimension of Islam — a tradition of inner transformation, direct divine experience, and spiritual discipline that has produced some of the world's greatest poets (Rumi, Haf
N_2_04 — Assassins (Hashashin) — History, Legend, and the Order of Nizari Ismailis
The Assassins — more accurately the Nizari Ismaili Order — were a medieval Shia Muslim sect that, under the leadership of Hassan-i Sabbah beginning in 1090 CE, established a network of mountain fortresses across Iran and
N_2_14 — Priory of Sion — Myth & Reality
The Priory of Sion (French: Prieuré de Sion) is one of the most thoroughly investigated alleged secret societies in modern history — and one whose fraudulent origins are now definitively established. [KEY FINDING] The Pr
N_2_13 — Islamic Esoteric Orders: Ismaili, Sufi, and Heterodox Networks
The Islamic world developed elaborate esoteric (bāṭinī) traditions organized through hierarchical spiritual orders, initiatory lineages, and secretive organizational structures that closely parallel Western secret societ
N_1_15 — Islamic Esoteric Networks
Islamic esoteric traditions encompass a vast network of mystical orders, philosophical schools, and initiatory lineages spanning from the 8th century CE to the present. The Sufi tariqas (orders), Ismaili Nizari networks,
N_1_17 — Mesopotamian & Babylonian Mystery Traditions
Mesopotamian mystery traditions represent some of the oldest documented esoteric systems in human civilization, predating the Egyptian and Greek mysteries that later drew from them. The Babylonian priesthood (the āšipu a
N_1_05 — Mithraic Mysteries — The Roman Underground Cult
The Mysteries of Mithras constituted one of the most widespread and architecturally distinctive mystery religions of the Roman Empire, flourishing from roughly the 1st through the 4th centuries CE. Practiced exclusively
N_3_06 — Golden Dawn and Modern Western Ceremonial Magic
The Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, founded in London in 1888 by William Wynn Westcott, Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers, and William Robert Woodman, was the most influential ceremonial magical order of the modern era
N_4_02 — Money, Debt, and the Architecture of Power
Money is the most pervasive technology in human civilization — more people interact with monetary systems daily than with any other human invention. Yet the history of money reveals something counterintuitive: DEBT came
N_4_04 — P2 Lodge (Propaganda Due) and Political Secret Societies
Propaganda Due (P2) was a clandestine Masonic lodge in Italy that operated as a state-within-a-state from the 1960s through its exposure in 1981. Led by Licio Gelli — a former Fascist who became one of the most powerful
R_4_11 — Regeneration: Axolotl, Planaria, Hydra, and Limb Regrowth
Regeneration — the ability of an organism to regrow lost or damaged body parts — ranges from the routine (skin healing, liver regrowth in humans) to the spectacular: the axolotl (Mexican salamander) can regrow entire lim
R_4_08 — Echolocation and the Evolution of Sensory Systems
The evolution of sensory systems represents some of the most striking convergent solutions to ecological challenges across the animal kingdom. Echolocation — the ability to emit sound pulses and interpret returning echoe
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