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316 results for "oral health" — page 4 of 16
ZE_3_14 — Neuroethics: Brain Scanning, Cognitive Liberty, and Moral Enhancement
Neuroethics — a field formalized in the early 2000s — addresses the ethical, legal, and social implications of neuroscience and neurotechnology. As brain imaging, neural interfaces, pharmacological interventions, and com
ZE_1_09 — Metaethics and Moral Realism
Metaethics asks not "what should I do?" (normative ethics) but "what is the nature of moral claims themselves?" — investigating whether moral facts exist, what moral language means, how moral knowledge is possible, and t
ZE_1_19 — Risk Ethics & the Precautionary Principle: Uncertainty, Decision-Making & Moral Responsibility
Risk ethics — the philosophical study of how moral agents should make decisions under conditions of uncertainty, incomplete information, and potentially catastrophic consequences — has become one of the most practically
ZE_1_10 — Moral Psychology and Development
Moral psychology investigates how humans actually make moral judgments, develop moral capacities, and experience moral emotions — bridging empirical research and philosophical ethics. Developmental approaches: Jean Piage
ZE_1_01 — Ethics Across Civilizations: Universal Moral Patterns
Despite vast cultural differences, virtually every civilization in human history has independently developed strikingly similar core moral principles: reciprocity (the Golden Rule), prohibitions against murder and theft,
V_4_13 — Mathematics of Voting: Arrow's Theorem, Fairness, and Electoral Systems
The mathematics of voting — a branch of social choice theory — applies rigorous mathematical analysis to the problem of aggregating individual preferences into collective decisions, revealing deep impossibility results t
A_4_31 — Amazonian Indigenous Cosmologies: Tupi, Guarani & Their World
The Tupi-Guarani language family encompasses hundreds of indigenous peoples across a vast territory stretching from the Amazon Basin through eastern Brazil to the Río de la Plata region of Paraguay, Argentina, and Urugua
A_4_17 — Aboriginal Australian Dreaming Narratives
The Dreaming (known by various language-specific names — Jukurrpa in Warlpiri, Tjukurpa in Pitjantjatjara/Yankunytjatjara, Wongar in Yolngu) is the central cosmological, legal, and ontological framework of Aboriginal Aus
A_4_33 — Inuit Cosmology & Sedna Mythology
Inuit cosmology is the spiritual and philosophical tradition of the Inuit peoples — the indigenous inhabitants of the Arctic and Subarctic regions of North America, from Alaska through Arctic Canada (Nunavut, Nunavik, Nu
A_4_29 — Mongolian & Turkic Epic Traditions
The Mongolian and Turkic epic traditions constitute one of the world's great oral literary heritages, spanning from the Altai Mountains to Anatolia across more than two millennia. Central texts include the Secret History
A_3_07 — Kalevala and Finnish-Baltic Mythology
The Kalevala is the Finnish national epic, compiled from oral folk poetry (runo songs) by physician-scholar Elias Lönnrot and first published in 1835 (32 poems) with an expanded edition of 50 poems in 1849. Lönnrot trave
A_3_11 — Homeric Hymns: Divine Preludes and the Gods of Olympus
The Homeric Hymns are a collection of 33 hexameter poems addressed to individual Greek deities, composed between approximately 750 and 500 BCE and attributed in antiquity to Homer — though they are the work of multiple a
A_3_20 — Dogon Cosmological Knowledge
The Dogon are a West African people numbering approximately 800,000, living primarily on the Bandiagara Escarpment and surrounding plateau in Mali. Their remarkably detailed cosmological and astronomical knowledge became
A_3_21 — West African Creation Texts: Bambara & Fulani Cosmogony
The Bambara (Bamana) and Fulani (Fula/Peul) peoples of the western Sahel (Mali, Guinea, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Nigeria, and across West Africa) possess two of the most elaborate creation mythologies in Sub-Saharan Africa
U_1_23 — Aboriginal Songlines
Songlines (also called dreaming tracks, song cycles, or *yiri in some Aboriginal languages) are an ancient system of oral navigation, cultural law, and cosmological knowledge used by Aboriginal Australian peoples — repre
U_5_07 — Art Therapy and Healing Through Art
Art therapy — the clinical use of art-making within a therapeutic relationship to improve psychological well-being — and the broader phenomenon of healing through creative expression bridge the domains of art, psychology
X_5_23 — Zoonotic Disease: Pathogen Spillover from Animals to Humans
Zoonotic diseases — infections that transmit from animals to humans — constitute approximately 60–75% of all emerging infectious diseases and have caused the most devastating pandemics in human history. The Neolithic rev
X_5_06 — Pediatrics: The Medicine of Childhood
Pediatrics is the branch of medicine devoted to the health and medical care of infants, children, and adolescents (from birth through age 18–21). The specialty arose from the recognition that children are not simply "sma
X_4_04 — Nursing and Caregiving History
Nursing — the professional practice of patient care, health promotion, and illness prevention — has evolved from informal family and religious caregiving to a scientifically grounded profession. Pre-modern: caregiving fe
ZH_4_18 — Indigenous Star Map Catalog
Indigenous star map systems — the astronomical knowledge embedded in the oral traditions, navigation practices, ceremonial calendars, and landscape relationships of non-Western cultures — represent a vast but systematica
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