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.
1,138 results for "AI alignment" — page 46 of 57
P_2_10 — Utilitarianism: Bentham, Mill, Singer, and Consequentialist Ethics
Utilitarianism is the ethical theory that the morally right action in any situation is the one that produces the greatest overall happiness (or well-being, or preference satisfaction) for the greatest number of those aff
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_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_05 — Ethics of Civil Disobedience: Thoreau, Gandhi, King, and Nonviolent Resistance
Civil disobedience — the deliberate, public, nonviolent violation of law undertaken to protest injustice and appeal to the moral conscience of the community — occupies a distinctive position in political ethics. It is no
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_5_09 — Ethics of Automation and Labor: Displacement, UBI, and Human Purpose
Automation ethics confronts the moral dimensions of technological change that displaces human labor — a process that has accelerated dramatically with advances in artificial intelligence, robotics, and digital platforms.
ZE_4_06 — Ethics of Death and Dying
The ethics of death and dying encompasses philosophical questions about the nature and badness of death, moral debates about end-of-life decisions (euthanasia, assisted suicide, palliative care), and the definition of de
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_07 — Ethics of Colonialism and Reparations
The ethics of colonialism and reparations examines the moral dimensions of European imperial expansion (c. 1492–1960s and its ongoing legacies), the transatlantic slave trade, settler colonialism, and the question of wha
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_4_14 — Ethics of Forgiveness: Justice, Mercy, and Transitional Reconciliation
Forgiveness — the decision to release resentment and the desire for retribution toward a wrongdoer — stands at the complex intersection of ethics, psychology, theology, and political theory. Philosophical analysis of for
ZE_3_07 — Ethics of Consciousness and Sentience
The ethics of consciousness and sentience investigates the moral implications of phenomenal experience — what moral obligations arise from the fact that some entities can feel, suffer, and have subjective experiences? Th
ZE_3_21 — Neuroethics and Memory Manipulation
Neuroethics — the study of ethical, legal, and social implications of neuroscience and neurotechnology — has emerged as a critical discipline as advances in brain imaging, neuropharmacology, and neurostimulation create u
ZE_3_01 — Environmental Ethics and Deep Ecology
Environmental ethics examines the moral relationship between humans and the natural environment — Do non-human entities have intrinsic value? Do we have moral obligations to ecosystems, species, and future generations? T
ZE_1_14 — Platonic Ethics: Justice, the Good, and the Philosopher-King
Plato (c. 428–348 BCE) stands as one of the foundational architects of Western ethical philosophy. While his metaphysical doctrines — the Theory of Forms, the immortality of the soul, the cosmology of the Timaeus — are t
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_1_20 — Virtue Ethics Revival
The revival of virtue ethics in the second half of the twentieth century represents one of the most significant developments in modern moral philosophy — a return to Aristotelian character-based ethics that challenged th
ZE_1_05 — Utilitarianism and Consequentialism
Consequentialism is the family of ethical theories holding that the moral rightness of an action depends entirely on its consequences — what matters is the outcome, not the motive or the nature of the act itself. Utilita
ZE_1_13 — Philosophy of Play, Games, and the Sacred Ludic
The philosophy of play examines one of humanity's most fundamental yet philosophically neglected activities. Johan Huizinga (Homo Ludens, 1938) argued that play is not merely one activity among others but the foundation
ZE_1_04 — Virtue Ethics — Aristotle to MacIntyre
Virtue ethics is the ethical tradition that focuses not on rules for action (deontology — ZE_1_06) or on consequences (utilitarianism — ZE_1_05) but on character: What kind of person should I be? What human excellences (
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