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.
2,448 results for "Ur dragon" — page 91 of 123
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_11 — Pragmatist Ethics
Pragmatist ethics — developed primarily by Charles Sanders Peirce (1839–1914), William James (1842–1910), John Dewey (1859–1952), and further by Richard Rorty (1931–2007) and Cornel West (b. 1953) — rejects the search fo
ZE_1_17 — Epistemic Ethics and Intellectual Virtue
Epistemic ethics — the study of moral and ethical dimensions of knowledge, belief, and inquiry — examines our obligations as knowers: when we are responsible for what we believe, how we treat others as sources and recipi
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 (
ZE_1_02 — Political Philosophy — Power, Justice, and the State
Political philosophy examines the fundamental questions of collective human life: What is justice? What legitimates political authority? When is revolution justified? Who should rule? From Plato's philosopher-kings throu
ZE_1_08 — Existentialist Ethics
Existentialist ethics grounds morality not in external systems (divine commands, rational duties, utilitarian calculus) but in the radical freedom and responsibility of the individual. Originating with Søren Kierkegaard
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_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_04 — Taboo, the Sacred, and Boundary Transgression
Taboo — the prohibition of certain acts, objects, or persons as dangerous, polluting, or sacred — is one of the most universal features of human culture, yet one of the most difficult to explain. From the Polynesian orig
ZE_2_01 — Alchemy and Transmutation Across Civilizations
Alchemy — the art and science of transformation — emerged independently or semi-independently in at least three civilizations: Egyptian-Greek-Arabic-European (the Western tradition), Chinese (waidan/neidan), and Indian (
ZE_2_11 — Liminality, Ritual Transition, and Ethics of Transformation
Liminality — from the Latin limen (threshold) — describes the ambiguous middle phase of ritual transitions where participants are "betwixt and between" established social categories. Arnold van Gennep (Les rites de passa
ZE_2_08 — Philosophy of Time and Temporal Ethics
The philosophy of time and temporal ethics investigates how our understanding of time's nature shapes moral obligations. McTaggart's 1908 argument that time is unreal introduced the distinction between A-series (past/pre
ZE_2_03 — Ritual, Symbol, and the Sacred — Theory of Religious Experience
Ritual, symbol, and the experience of the sacred are universal features of human culture — present in every known society from the Upper Paleolithic to the present. This document examines the major theoretical frameworks
N_2_09 — Thuggee and the Cult of Kali
Thuggee (from Hindi ṭhag, "deceiver/cheat") refers to organized groups of highway robbers and murderers who operated across central and northern India, primarily from the 17th through early 19th centuries, killing travel
N_2_02 — Sufi Orders and Islamic Esoteric Traditions
Sufism (tasawwuf) is the mystical-contemplative dimension of Islam — a tradition of inner transformation, direct divine experience, and spiritual discipline that has produced some of the world's greatest poets (Rumi, Haf
N_2_12 — Templar Banking and Financial Innovation
The Knights Templar (formally the Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon, founded c. 1119 CE) are primarily remembered as warrior-monks of the Crusades, but their most enduring historical legacy may
N_2_05 — Cathars, Albigensians, and the Grail Heresy
The Cathars (from Greek katharoi, "pure ones") were a medieval Christian dualist movement that flourished in the Languedoc region of southern France and parts of northern Italy from roughly the mid-12th to the mid-14th c
N_2_04 — Assassins (Hashashin) — History, Legend, and the Order of Nizari Ismailis
The Assassins — more accurately the Nizari Ismaili Order — were a medieval Shia Muslim sect that, under the leadership of Hassan-i Sabbah beginning in 1090 CE, established a network of mountain fortresses across Iran and
N_2_14 — Priory of Sion — Myth & Reality
The Priory of Sion (French: Prieuré de Sion) is one of the most thoroughly investigated alleged secret societies in modern history — and one whose fraudulent origins are now definitively established. [KEY FINDING] The Pr
N_2_07 — Opus Dei and Catholic Lay Orders
Opus Dei (Latin: "Work of God") is a Catholic institution (technically a personal prelature of the Roman Catholic Church since 1982) founded by Spanish priest Josemaría Escrivá (1902–1975) in Madrid on October 2, 1928. E
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