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455 results for "land ethic" — page 2 of 23
O_5_12 — Volcanic Islands: Surtsey, Hawaii, and Emergent Land
Volcanic islands — landmasses formed by submarine volcanic eruptions that build up from the ocean floor until they breach the sea surface — represent some of the most dynamic and scientifically informative geological fea
ZD_3_15 — Reversible Computing: Landauer's Principle and the Thermodynamics of Computation
Reversible computing — the theory and practice of performing computation without irreversible information loss — sits at the intersection of computer science, thermodynamics, and information theory, centered on the profo
ZD_2_06 — Ethics of AI and Algorithmic Bias
AI ethics examines the moral implications of designing, deploying, and governing artificial intelligence systems, while algorithmic bias refers to systematic errors in automated decision-making that produce unfair outcom
L_4_13 — Ancient DNA: Methods, Revelations, and Ethical Debates
Ancient DNA (aDNA) — genetic material recovered from biological remains thousands to hundreds of thousands of years old — has revolutionized our understanding of human evolution, migration, and population history. The fi
L_4_12 — CRISPR Gene Drives and Population Genetics Ethics
CRISPR gene drives — genetic engineering systems that combine CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing with super-Mendelian inheritance to spread a modified gene through an entire wild population far faster than natural selection — repr
L_2_13 — Genetic History of Island Southeast Asia: Wallace Line and Beyond
Island Southeast Asia (ISEA) — the vast archipelagic region encompassing the Philippines, Indonesia, Timor, and the islands between mainland Asia and Australo-Papua — is one of the most genetically complex regions on Ear
H_3_10 — Museum Ethics — Who Owns the Past?
The question of who owns the past — and specifically, who has rightful custody of archaeological objects, cultural artifacts, and human remains — is the central ethical controversy in contemporary museum practice. The de
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_5_11 — Spinoza: Substance Monism, Ethics as Geometry, Conatus
Baruch (Benedict) de Spinoza (1632-1677), a Dutch philosopher of Portuguese-Jewish origin, constructed one of the most radical and rigorous metaphysical systems in the history of philosophy — presented in his masterwork,
P_5_15 — Simone de Beauvoir: Ethics of Ambiguity and the Second Sex
Simone de Beauvoir (1908–1986) was one of the most important philosophers of the twentieth century — a foundational figure in both existentialist philosophy and feminist theory whose work has shaped debates on freedom, o
P_2_18 — Bioethics Frameworks
Bioethics is the interdisciplinary field that examines ethical questions arising from advances in biology, medicine, and biotechnology. The field emerged as a distinct discipline in the early 1970s, catalyzed by public r
P_2_09 — Cosmopolitanism and Global Ethics
Cosmopolitanism — from the Greek kosmopolitēs ("citizen of the world") — is the philosophical tradition asserting that all human beings belong to a single moral community regardless of nationality, ethnicity, or culture.
P_2_11 — Deontological Ethics: Duty, Rights, and the Categorical Imperative
Deontological ethics (from Greek deon, "duty" or "obligation") is the family of moral theories holding that the rightness or wrongness of an action depends on the action's conformity to moral rules, duties, or rights — n
P_2_12 — Meta-Ethics: Moral Realism, Emotivism, and Constructivism
Meta-ethics is the branch of moral philosophy that asks foundational questions not about what is right or wrong (that is normative ethics) but about the nature, status, and foundations of moral claims themselves: Do mora
P_2_03 — Virtue Ethics
Virtue ethics — the moral theory centered on character rather than rules (deontology) or consequences (consequentialism) — asks not "What should I do?" but "What kind of person should I be?" Its roots lie in Aristotle's
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_06 — Ethics of Whistleblowing: Loyalty, Truth, and Institutional Accountability
Whistleblowing — the disclosure by a member of an organization of illegal, unethical, or harmful activities to parties capable of taking corrective action — forces a direct confrontation between competing moral obligatio
ZE_5_12 — Ethics of Children: Rights, Development, and Moral Status
The ethics of children addresses a fundamental puzzle: children are full human beings deserving of moral respect, yet they lack the autonomy, rationality, and experience that ground many standard moral and political righ
ZE_5_15 — Ethics of Disability: Social Models, Access, and Inclusion
The ethics of disability has been transformed over the past five decades by the shift from the medical model — which defines disability as individual pathology to be cured or managed — to the social model — which defines
ZE_5_03 — Jewish Ethics: Talmudic Reasoning, Tikkun Olam, and Halakhic Law
Jewish ethics — rooted in the Torah (the Five Books of Moses), the Talmud (the vast body of rabbinic law and interpretation), and centuries of philosophical commentary — represents one of the world's oldest continuous et
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