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Law of Cause and Effect

A Wisdom Archive on Law of Cause and Effect

Law of Cause and Effect

A selection of articles related to Law of Cause and Effect

We recommend this article: Law of Cause and Effect - 1, and also this: Law of Cause and Effect - 2.
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Law Of Cause And Effect
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Law of Cause and Effect

ARTICLES RELATED TO Law of Cause and Effect

Law of Cause and Effect: Pagan Paganism Dictionary II on Law of Cause and Effect

Law of Cause and Effect:

“If exactly the same actions are done under exactly the same conditions, they will usually be associated with exactly the same ‘results’.” Good luck with those “exactlies!”

 

(See also: Law of Cause and Effect, Pagan, Paganism, Pagan Dictionary)

 

Law of Cause and Effect: New Age Spiritual Dictionary on Hermetic principle of Cause and Effect

Hermetic principle of cause and effect

Known also as the law of Karma: every thought, every belief, every action has a reaction, an effect. Noted in the Christian tradition as "casting one's bread upon the water" to return in due time in the wisdom of the Higher; also as the concept that we shall reap what we have sown

 

(See also: Hermetic principle of Cause and Effect, Body Mind and Soul)

 

Law of Cause and Effect: Social Studies Dictionary - Cause-and-Effect Hypotheses

Definition and meaning of Cause-and-Effect Hypotheses

 

Cause-and-Effect Hypotheses - [Research Methods]

An hypothesis is an explanation or a theory which can be tested by further investigation. It derives from comprehending a relationship between a cause and an effect and developing a theory linking the two. Researchers develop hypotheses from these "best-guess theories," and base their ideas on observed data with the supposition that the informed "guess" (hypothesis) will stand up to further analysis based on additional data. Hypotheses can also be generated by predicting a different result emanating from some type of change (intervention) in the input (stimulus), which would be phrased as an "if-then. . . " statement. The Russian physiologist Ivan Pavlov tested his theory that a repeated stimulation or conditioning could cause a specific response and won the Nobel prize in 1904 for his work. B. F. Skinner, an American psychologist, expanded on the theory by researching human behavior and the relationship of positive reinforcement to human behavior. Systems of controlled reward and punishment developed from Skinner's cause-and-effect hypothesis.

(Source: The Social Studies Center at Texas University )

 

Also see these pages:  Social Studies, Social Studies Sitemap, History, History Sitemap

 

Law of Cause and Effect: Encyclopedia - Cause and Effect TNG episode

"Cause and Effect" is considered by many fans to be one of the best episodes of the series Star Trek: The Next Generation. It features guest star Kelsey Grammer and was directed by Jonathan Frakes from a script by Brannon Braga. It originally aired as Episode 118 on 23 March 1992 (Stardate 45652.1). Cause and Effect TNG episode - Plot summary. The show has a famous opening sequence: The Enterprise-D has suffered heavy damage and attempts to control the disaster are failing. Captain Pic ...

Including:

Read more here: » Cause and Effect TNG episode: Encyclopedia - Cause and Effect TNG episode

Law of Cause and Effect: Cause of the Cosmos

Hindu Quotes: Cause of the Cosmos

 

What is the cause of the cosmos? Is it Brahman?

 From where do we come? By what live?

 Where shall we find peace at last?

 

 What power governs the duality

 Of pleasure and pain by which we are driven?

 

 Time, nature, necessity, accident,

 Elements, energy, intelligence--

 None of these can be the First Cause.

 They are effects, whose only purpose is

 To help the self rise above pleasure and pain.

 

- Shvetashvatara Upanishad

 

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(See also: Hinduism Archives, Hindu Quotes, Inspirational Quotes, Love Quotes, Friendship Quotes, Life Quotes)

 

Read more here: » Hindu Quotes: Cause of the Cosmos

Law of Cause and Effect: Encyclopedia - Will law

In the law, a will or testament is a document by which a person (the testator) regulates the rights of others over his property or family after death. For the devolution of property not disposed of by will, see inheritance and intestacy. In the strictest sense, "will" is a general term, while "testament" applies only to dispositions of personal property (this distinction is seldom observed). A will is also used as the instrument in a trust. Will law - Freedom of disposition. The conception of ...

Including:

Read more here: » Will law: Encyclopedia - Will law

Law of Cause and Effect: Encyclopedia - Causative

A causative form, in linguistics, is an expression of an agent causing or forcing a patient to perform an action (or to be in a certain state). All languages have ways to express causation, but they differ in the means. In some languages there are |morphological devices (such as inflection) that change verbs into their causative forms, or adjectives into verbs of "becoming". Other languages employ periphrasis, with idiomatic expressions or auxiliary verbs. All languages also have lexical causative forms (such as English rise ...

Including:

Read more here: » Causative: Encyclopedia - Causative

Law of Cause and Effect: Encyclopedia - Assignment law

An assignment is a term used with similar meanings in the law of contracts and in the law of real estate. In both instances, it encompasses the transfer of rights held by one party - the assignor - to another party - the assignee. The legal nature of the assignment determines some additional rights and liabilities that accompany the act. Assignment law - Assignment of contract rights. Assignment of rights under a contract is the complete transfer of the rights to receive the benefits accruing ...

Including:

Read more here: » Assignment law: Encyclopedia - Assignment law

Law of Cause and Effect: Encyclopedia - Adverse effect medicine

Adverse effect, in medicine, is an abnormal, harmful, undesired and/or unintended consequences, although not necessarily unexpected, which is obtained as the result of a therapy or other medical intervention, such as drug/chemotherapy, physical therapy, surgery, medical procedure, use of a medical device, etc. Iatrogenesis (literally, generated by a physician) is a common cause of adverse effects, as well as medical error. Using a drug or other medical intervention which is contraindicated may increase the risk of adverse effects. Adverse effects may cause medical complication ...

Including:

Read more here: » Adverse effect medicine: Encyclopedia - Adverse effect medicine

Law of Cause and Effect: Encyclopedia - Causes of the French Revolution

The causes of the French Revolution, the uprising which brought the regime of King Louis XVI to an end, were manifold. France in 1789 was one of the richest and most powerful nations in Europe; only in Great Britain and the Netherlands did the common people have more freedom and less chance of arbitrary punishment. Nevertheless, the ancien régime was brought down, partly by its own rigidity in the face of a changing world, partly by the ambitions of a rising bourgeoisie, allied with aggrieved peasants and wage-earners and with ...

Including:

Read more here: » Causes of the French Revolution: Encyclopedia - Causes of the French Revolution

Law of Cause and Effect: Encyclopedia - Wealth effect

In economics, the wealth effect is an increase in spending that accompanies an increase in wealth. The effect includes the changes in the amounts and composition of consumer consumption caused by changes in consumer wealth. Economists think people spend more when they feel "richer", and that this has macroeconomic implications. Feeling richer can mean that one's salary has increased (an income effect) or that one has received a cash bonus. A typical response to the wealth effect includes a reduced supply of labor; however, pers

Read more here: » Wealth effect: Encyclopedia - Wealth effect

Law of Cause and Effect: Encyclopedia - Babylonian law

The material for the study of Babylonian law is singularly extensive. The so-called "contracts" exist in the thousands, including a great variety of deeds, conveyances, bonds, receipts, accounts, and most important of all, the actual legal decisions given by the judges in the law courts. Historical inscriptions, royal charters and rescripts, dispatches, private letters and the general literature afford welcome supplementary information. Even grammatical and lexicographical works contain many extracts or short sentences bearing on law and custom. The ...

Including:

Read more here: » Babylonian law: Encyclopedia - Babylonian law

Law of Cause and Effect: Encyclopedia - Causation law

In law, causation is the name given to the process of testing whether defendants should be fixed with liability for the outcome to their acts and omissions that injure or cause loss to others. The following conceptual statement should be taken as sufficiently general to apply equally to Criminal Law, Tort and the general process of quantifying damages in the civil law. Causation law - The concepts. Most legal systems are to a greater or lesser extent concerned with the notions of fairness and justice. If a ...

Including:

Read more here: » Causation law: Encyclopedia - Causation law

Law of Cause and Effect: Encyclopedia - Chinese law

The Law of China, for most of the history of China, was rooted in the Confucian philosophy of social control. These influences remain in the Soviet-influenced system of the People's Republic of China and the German-based system of the Republic of China. Chinese law - Imperial era. Main article: Traditional Chinese law The teachings of Confucius have had an enduring effect on Chinese life and have provided the basis for the social order through much of the country's history. Confucians believed ...

Including:

Read more here: » Chinese law: Encyclopedia - Chinese law

Law of Cause and Effect: Social Studies Dictionary - Cause-and-Effect Hypotheses

Definition and meaning of Cause-and-Effect Hypotheses

 

Cause-and-Effect Hypotheses - [Research Methods]

An hypothesis is an explanation or a theory which can be tested by further investigation. It derives from comprehending a relationship between a cause and an effect and developing a theory linking the two. Researchers develop hypotheses from these "best-guess theories," and base their ideas on observed data with the supposition that the informed "guess" (hypothesis) will stand up to further analysis based on additional data. Hypotheses can also be generated by predicting a different result emanating from some type of change (intervention) in the input (stimulus), which would be phrased as an "if-then. . . " statement. The Russian physiologist Ivan Pavlov tested his theory that a repeated stimulation or conditioning could cause a specific response and won the Nobel prize in 1904 for his work. B. F. Skinner, an American psychologist, expanded on the theory by researching human behavior and the relationship of positive reinforcement to human behavior. Systems of controlled reward and punishment developed from Skinner's cause-and-effect hypothesis.

(Source: The Social Studies Center at Texas University )

 

Also see these pages:  Social Studies, Social Studies Sitemap, History, History Sitemap

 

Law of Cause and Effect: Encyclopedia II - Slashdot effect - Cause

Slashdot consists of brief submitted articles and a self-moderated discussion on each story. In response to the stories, large masses of readers tend to simultaneously rush to view referenced sites. The ensuing flood of page requests, known as a slashdotting, often exceeds the ability of the site to respond in a timely manner, rendering the site slashdotted and, for many visitors, unavailable for a time, occasionally exceeding the site's bandwidth limitations or causing servers to slow down. A comment in a Slashdot story summar ...

See also:

Slashdot effect, Slashdot effect - Cause, Slashdot effect - Extent, Slashdot effect - Communities, Slashdot effect - Assistance and prevention

Read more here: » Slashdot effect: Encyclopedia II - Slashdot effect - Cause

Law of Cause and Effect: Social Studies Dictionary - Causes and Effects of the Civil War

Definition and meaning of Causes and Effects of the Civil War

 

Causes and Effects of the Civil War

Sectionalism is loyalty to local interests instead of national concerns. In the United States, the differences between northern, southern, and western areas increased throughout the early 1800s. Different cultures and business practices existed in the three sections of the country and these concerns often conflicted. While farming was central to the livelihoods in all areas, northerners were more involved in manufacturing and commerce; capital was invested in factories and transportation. Southerners were more dependent on cash-crop agriculture, growing tobacco, sugar, or cotton; capital was invested in slaves and in overseas markets. Westerners depended on cheap land for expansion and good transportation networks to remain in touch with eastern business. Political conflict erupted in the 1820s over issues of internal improvements, the sale of public lands, tariffs, state's rights, and slavery. These sectional conflicts contributed to the start of the American Civil War (1861-1865). A civil war is a war fought between factions or sections within a country. The war exacted considerable tolls on northerners and southerners alike but the South suffered great physical destruction and human loss as a result of the carnage of battle. The North as the military victor realized economic and political dominance of the nation in the years after the war. The South remained behind the North economically, culturally, and socially into the mid-1900s as a result of several factors. The poverty of the South continued for generations due to the agricultural system of sharecropping and tenancy, small expenditures for education, the suppression of blacks which prevented them from serving fully as wage earners and contributors to society, and limited industrial development. Attempts to reconstruct southern government failed and military occupation of the South by national troops ended in 1877 when Democrats returned to power. Freed slaves gained citizenship and political representation as the result of a series of amendments to the U.S. Constitution passed between 1865 and 1870 but these rights eroded in the 1890s as disfranchisement and segregation became legal and racial violence increased.

(Source: The Social Studies Center at Texas University )

 

Also see these pages:  Social Studies, Social Studies Sitemap, History, History Sitemap

 

Law of Cause and Effect: Social Studies Dictionary - Causes and Effects of the Civil War

Definition and meaning of Causes and Effects of the Civil War

 

Causes and Effects of the Civil War

Sectionalism is loyalty to local interests instead of national concerns. In the United States, the differences between northern, southern, and western areas increased throughout the early 1800s. Different cultures and business practices existed in the three sections of the country and these concerns often conflicted. While farming was central to the livelihoods in all areas, northerners were more involved in manufacturing and commerce; capital was invested in factories and transportation. Southerners were more dependent on cash-crop agriculture, growing tobacco, sugar, or cotton; capital was invested in slaves and in overseas markets. Westerners depended on cheap land for expansion and good transportation networks to remain in touch with eastern business. Political conflict erupted in the 1820s over issues of internal improvements, the sale of public lands, tariffs, state's rights, and slavery. These sectional conflicts contributed to the start of the American Civil War (1861-1865). A civil war is a war fought between factions or sections within a country. The war exacted considerable tolls on northerners and southerners alike but the South suffered great physical destruction and human loss as a result of the carnage of battle. The North as the military victor realized economic and political dominance of the nation in the years after the war. The South remained behind the North economically, culturally, and socially into the mid-1900s as a result of several factors. The poverty of the South continued for generations due to the agricultural system of sharecropping and tenancy, small expenditures for education, the suppression of blacks which prevented them from serving fully as wage earners and contributors to society, and limited industrial development. Attempts to reconstruct southern government failed and military occupation of the South by national troops ended in 1877 when Democrats returned to power. Freed slaves gained citizenship and political representation as the result of a series of amendments to the U.S. Constitution passed between 1865 and 1870 but these rights eroded in the 1890s as disfranchisement and segregation became legal and racial violence increased.

(Source: The Social Studies Center at Texas University )

 

Also see these pages:  Social Studies, Social Studies Sitemap, History, History Sitemap

 

Law of Cause and Effect: Encyclopedia II - Toubon Law - Effects of the law

The most significant effect of the law is that it makes it mandatory for commercial advertisements and public announcements to be given in French. This does not rule out advertisements made in a foreign language: it is sufficient to provide a translation in a footnote, a very widespread practice. This was justified as a measure for the protection of the consumer. In addition, the law specifies obligations for public legal persons (government administrations etc.), mandating the use of French in publications, or at least in summaries o ...

See also:

Toubon Law, Toubon Law - Effects of the law, Toubon Law - Perception abroad, Toubon Law - The Georgia Tech Lorraine case

Read more here: » Toubon Law: Encyclopedia II - Toubon Law - Effects of the law

Law of Cause and Effect: Encyclopedia II - Cause and Effect TNG episode - Notes

The production team had hoped to get Kirstie Alley in a cameo role behind Kelsey Grammar in the USS Bozeman shots, reprising her role as Lt. Saavik from the movie Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, but her asking price was too high for such a small role. The USS Bozeman is named after writer Brannon Braga's home town, Bozeman, Montana. Although never seen on screen again, the Bozeman was mentioned in dialogue in The Next Generation episode All Good Things..., and the films Star Trek: Generations and Star Trek: First ...

See also:

Cause and Effect TNG episode, Cause and Effect TNG episode - Plot summary, Cause and Effect TNG episode - Notes, Cause and Effect TNG episode - External link

Read more here: » Cause and Effect TNG episode: Encyclopedia II - Cause and Effect TNG episode - Notes

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related to
Law Of Cause And Effect
Index of Articles
related to
Law Of Cause And Effect



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