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200 results for "harm principle" — page 8 of 10
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_15 — Moral Luck: Nagel, Williams, and Fortune in Moral Judgment
Moral luck refers to the phenomenon that people are morally judged — praised or blamed — for factors beyond their control, despite the widely held principle that moral judgment should apply only to what is within an agen
ZE_1_12 — Comparative Legal Philosophy — Sacred Law Across Cultures
Comparative legal philosophy examines how different civilizations ground law in sacred or metaphysical foundations, producing legal systems that differ fundamentally in their relationship between human legislation and tr
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,
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
N_2_06 — Druze — The Secret Religion of the Levant
The Druze are a distinct ethno-religious community of approximately 1-2 million people concentrated in Lebanon, Syria, Israel, and Jordan, whose faith crystallized in the early 11th century during the Fatimid Caliphate i
N_1_14 — Pythagorean Brotherhood: Mathematics, Mysticism & Secret Knowledge
The Pythagorean Brotherhood (c. 530–400 BCE), founded by Pythagoras of Samos in Croton (southern Italy), was simultaneously a philosophical school, a religious community, and a political movement. The Pythagoreans are cr
N_5_01 — The Shamanic-to-Institutional Pipeline
Across every major civilization, a remarkably consistent pattern emerges: direct, experiential knowledge-traditions — shamanic practices rooted in altered states of consciousness — undergo a five-stage transformation int
N_4_11 — Triads and Chinese Heaven and Earth Society
The Tiandihui (天地會, "Heaven and Earth Society"), also known as the Hongmen (洪門, "Vast Gate"), the Three Harmonies Society (三合會, Sanhehui — the origin of the English term "Triad"), and by numerous other names, is one of t
N_4_05 — Chinese Secret Societies (White Lotus, Triads, and Sworn-Brother Organizations)
Chinese secret societies represent one of the longest-running traditions of clandestine organization in world history, with documented activity spanning at least four centuries and legendary traditions reaching back furt
R_3_04 — Sexual Selection — Mate Choice and Evolutionary Aesthetics
Sexual selection, first articulated by Charles Darwin in The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex (1871), explains traits that enhance mating success rather than survival — from the peacock's extravagant tail
R_5_07 — Ethnobotany: Plants, People, and Traditional Knowledge
Ethnobotany — the study of the relationships between plants and people across cultures and throughout history — documents how human societies have used plants for food, medicine, shelter, textiles, tools, dyes, poisons,
S_3_12 — Biodegradable Materials and Green Chemistry
Green chemistry — formalized by Paul Anastas and John Warner (1998, Green Chemistry: Theory and Practice) with Twelve Principles including waste prevention, atom economy, less hazardous synthesis, designed degradation, r
ZA_2_05 — Hawking Radiation and Black Hole Thermodynamics
In 1974, Stephen Hawking showed that black holes are not truly black — they emit thermal radiation at a temperature inversely proportional to their mass, implying that black holes slowly evaporate and eventually disappea
ZA_2_11 — Spacetime Foam and Quantum Gravity Effects
At the Planck scale — lengths of ~$1.6 \times 10^{-35}$ m and times of ~$5.4 \times 10^{-44}$ s — quantum mechanics and general relativity collide, and the smooth spacetime continuum of Einstein's theory is expected to b
ZA_2_06 — Spacetime Geometry: Minkowski, Causal Structure, and Light Cones
Spacetime — the four-dimensional continuum unifying space and time — is the arena in which all physics takes place. Einstein's special relativity (1905) revealed that space and time are not separate absolutes but are int
ZA_2_03 — General and Special Relativity — Einstein's Revolution
Albert Einstein's two theories of relativity — special (1905) and general (1915) — fundamentally reshaped the understanding of space, time, mass, energy, and gravity. Special relativity, built on Lorentz invariance and t
ZA_1_18 — Dark Energy and the Cosmological Constant Problem
Dark energy — the mysterious component constituting ~68% of the total energy density of the observable universe — drives the accelerating expansion of space and represents one of the deepest unsolved problems in physics.
ZA_5_06 — Quantum Thermodynamics: Heat, Work, and Entropy at the Quantum Scale
Quantum thermodynamics — the study of heat, work, entropy, and thermodynamic processes in systems where quantum-mechanical effects (superposition, entanglement, coherence, discreteness of energy levels) are significant —
ZA_4_11 — Time Crystals and Discrete Time Symmetry Breaking
A time crystal is a phase of matter that spontaneously breaks time-translation symmetry — the fundamental physical principle that the laws of physics are the same at all times (which, via Noether's theorem, is linked to
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