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75 results for "greatest happiness principle" — page 2 of 4
ZG_5_06 — Lexicography: Dictionary Making from Johnson to Digital
Lexicography — the art and science of dictionary making — is among the oldest scholarly enterprises concerned with language, stretching from ancient Mesopotamian word lists (Sumerian-Akkadian bilingual glossaries, c. 230
ZG_5_03 — Pragmatics: Context, Implicature, and Speech Acts
Pragmatics is the study of how context contributes to meaning — how speakers use language to accomplish actions, how listeners infer intended meanings beyond what is literally said, and how the social, physical, and disc
ZG_1_08 — Phoenician Alphabet — The Revolution from Consonants to Letters
The Phoenician alphabet — a 22-letter consonantal ("abjad") script developed by Phoenician-speaking Canaanites along the Levantine coast by ~1050 BCE — is arguably the single most consequential writing innovation in huma
J_1_16 — Fire Piston: Ancient Pneumatic Ignition Technology
The fire piston (also called fire syringe) is a device that ignites tinder through the rapid compression of air in a sealed cylinder — a practical application of adiabatic compression heating that was independently inven
Q_1_16 — History of Cosmology: Ancient to Modern
Cosmology — the study of the universe's origin, structure, and fate — is humanity's oldest intellectual pursuit and its most modern science. From the flat-earth mythologies of ancient Mesopotamia through the geocentric c
Q_1_20 — Fractal Cosmology: Is the Universe Self-Similar Across Scales?
The observable universe organises matter into a staggering fractal-like web of galaxy filaments, walls, voids, and clusters — structures visible at scales from 1 Mpc (galaxy groups) to 600 Mpc (the Hercules-Corona Boreal
Q_4_03 — General Relativity Tests and Confirmations
Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity (GR, 1915) has survived over a century of increasingly precise experimental tests, ranging from Solar System measurements to strong-field astrophysical observations. The cla
Q_4_32 — The Fundamental Constants: Physics, Life, and Mathematics
The universe runs on numbers — and not arbitrary ones. A small set of fundamental constants, mostly dimensionless, determines every property of matter, energy, space, and time. Change any of them by a fraction and atoms
Q_2_20 — Black Hole Information Paradox & Hawking Radiation
The black hole information paradox is arguably the deepest unsolved problem in theoretical physics, lying at the intersection of general relativity, quantum mechanics, and thermodynamics. In 1974, Stephen Hawking showed
INTERDOC_60 — AI Consciousness and Moral Status: The Triadic Framework
As AI systems cross behavioral thresholds once considered markers of intelligence — passing bar exams at the 90th percentile (GPT-4, March 2023), solving protein folding (AlphaFold2, 2020), exhibiting emergent reasoning
INTERDOC_31 — Simulation Reality: Ancient and Modern Convergence
Nick Bostrom (Oxford, 2003, "Are You Living in a Computer Simulation?", Philosophical Quarterly) formalized the simulation argument as a trilemma: either (1) civilizations almost always go extinct before developing simul
AI_Hallucination_Consciousness_Filter_Theory
ZB_1_13 — Sexual Selection and Mate Choice
Sexual selection — first articulated by Darwin (1871) in The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex — is the evolutionary process by which traits that increase mating success are favored, even when they decreas
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_23 — Commons Governance — Ostrom
Elinor Ostrom (1933–2012), professor of political science at Indiana University Bloomington, became the first woman to receive the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (2009) for her groundbreaking work demonstratin
G_3_14 — Simulation Argument — Philosophy, Physics, and Testability
The Simulation Argument — formally presented by philosopher Nick Bostrom (2003, Philosophical Quarterly) — is not the claim that we live in a computer simulation, but rather a trilemma: at least one of the following thre
G_3_10 — David Bohm's Implicate Order and Holographic Universe
David Bohm (1917–1992) was one of the most original and philosophically minded physicists of the 20th century, contributing both rigorous quantum mechanics and sweeping metaphysical visions. His pilot wave theory (1952)
G_3_01 — Quantum Mechanics & Ancient Knowledge
Quantum mechanics has overturned classical assumptions about reality: particles exist in superposition, observation collapses probability, and entanglement connects particles instantaneously across distance. These findin
G_3_24 — Post-Normal Science: Funtowicz, Ravetz, and Uncertainty
Post-normal science (PNS) is a framework for understanding and managing scientific inquiry when facts are uncertain, values in dispute, stakes high, and decisions urgent — conditions that characterize many of the most cr
T_2_04 — Positive Psychology & Wellbeing Science
Positive psychology — the scientific study of what makes life worth living — was formally launched by Martin Seligman in his 1998 APA presidential address, shifting psychology's traditional focus from pathology and dysfu
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