RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
2,480 results for "Brú na Bóinne" — page 43 of 124
P_1_11 — The Demiurge: Creator God in Philosophy and Religion
The Demiurge (from Greek dēmiourgos, "craftsman" or "artisan") is a concept of a divine creator figure responsible for fashioning the physical universe, most famously developed in Plato's dialogue Timaeus (~360 BCE) and
P_1_12 — Philosophy of Perception: Qualia, Illusion, and Direct Realism
The philosophy of perception investigates the nature, objects, and epistemological status of perceptual experience — asking what we are aware of when we see, hear, touch, taste, or smell the world, and how perceptual exp
P_5_09 — Wittgenstein: Language Games, Tractatus, and Investigations
Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein (1889-1951) is unique in the history of philosophy for having produced two profoundly influential but largely incompatible philosophical systems. His first major work, the Tractatus Logic
P_5_03 — Aesthetics — Philosophy of Beauty, Art, and the Sublime
Aesthetics — the philosophical study of beauty, art, taste, and the sublime — has been a central philosophical concern from Plato's suspicion of art as dangerous imitation to contemporary debates about the nature of aest
P_2_13 — Philosophy of Biology: Teleology, Species Concepts, and Function
The philosophy of biology examines the conceptual foundations, explanatory structures, and ontological commitments of the biological sciences — asking questions that biology itself presupposes but does not typically addr
P_2_06 — Political Philosophy: Justice, Power, and Authority
Political philosophy examines the nature of justice, power, authority, and the proper organization of collective human life. Plato (Republic, c. 375 BCE) argued that justice consists in each part of the soul and the city
ZE_5_07 — Ethics of Migration: Borders, Refugees, and the Right to Move
Migration ethics addresses one of the most consequential moral and political questions of the 21st century: who has the right to cross borders, who has the right to exclude, and what obligations states and individuals ow
ZE_5_16 — Climate Change Ethics: Responsibility, Justice, and Future Generations
Climate change ethics addresses the moral dimensions of anthropogenic global warming — a problem characterized by radical asymmetries of cause and effect, temporal scale, and vulnerability. The nations most responsible f
ZE_5_19 — Environmental Ethics & Deep Ecology
Environmental ethics is the branch of philosophy examining the moral relationship between humans and the natural environment — whether non-human entities (animals, plants, ecosystems, species, the biosphere) have intrins
ZE_5_20 — Ethics of Artificial Intelligence
The ethics of artificial intelligence addresses the moral, social, and existential challenges arising from the development and deployment of increasingly powerful AI systems. [KEY FINDING] Core issues span three horizons
ZE_5_18 — Research Ethics & Global Standards
Research ethics — the principles, regulations, and institutional structures governing the conduct of research involving human subjects, animals, and sensitive data — emerged as a formal discipline from the horrors of Naz
ZE_4_03 — Business Ethics and Corporate Responsibility
Business ethics examines the moral principles governing commercial activity, while corporate social responsibility (CSR) and Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) frameworks address the broader obligations of corpo
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_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_15 — Ethics of Nuclear Weapons: Deterrence, MAD, and Abolition
The ethics of nuclear weapons constitutes one of the most consequential moral questions of the modern era: Can the threat to annihilate millions of civilians ever be morally justified? Since the atomic bombings of Hirosh
ZE_4_01 — Just War Theory and Ethics of Violence
Just war theory — the ethical framework for evaluating when the use of military force is morally justified and how it may be conducted — has roots in classical antiquity (Cicero, Augustine) and medieval theology (Aquinas
ZE_3_23 — AI Ethics Frameworks
AI ethics frameworks have proliferated rapidly since 2016 as artificial intelligence systems moved from research laboratories into consequential real-world applications — criminal sentencing, hiring, lending, medical dia
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_2_07 — Confucian Ethics and Li
Confucian ethics (rujia lunli), originating with Confucius (Kong Qiu, 551–479 BCE) and developed by Mencius (Mengzi, c. 372–289 BCE) and Xunzi (c. 310–235 BCE), constitutes one of the world's most enduring ethical tradit
ZE_2_09 — Philosophy of Sovereignty
Sovereignty — the concept of supreme authority within a territory — has undergone radical transformation from its theological origins to contemporary debates about humanitarian intervention, indigenous self-determination
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