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Punishment

A Wisdom Archive on Punishment

Punishment

A selection of articles related to Punishment

We recommend this article: Punishment - 1, and also this: Punishment - 2.
punishment, Punishment, Punishment - History and rationale, Punishment - Possible reasons for punishment, Punishment - Scope of application, Punishment - Types of punishments, Punishment - For children, Punishment - Judicial and similar i.e. for crimes, Punishment - Other


ARTICLES RELATED TO Punishment

Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Prisoner TV series - Characters

The character structure of the series rarely changed throughout the series run, even though the individual personalities and actors often did. The prison population always comprised a "Top Dog" and gang, an elderly inmate, a handful of heavies used for "muscle" and an agitant prisoner who threatened the "Top Dog"'s control. Prisoner TV series - Early Episodes. The ma ...

See also:

Prisoner TV series, Prisoner TV series - Themes, Prisoner TV series - Characters, Prisoner TV series - Early Episodes, Prisoner TV series - Later Episodes, Prisoner TV series - Major storylines, Prisoner TV series - List of Top Dogs, Prisoner TV series - Analysis, Prisoner TV series - Continuity announcer comments, Prisoner TV series - Distribution, Prisoner TV series - Spin-offs

Read more here: » Prisoner TV series: Encyclopedia II - Prisoner TV series - Characters

Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Mel Gibson - Gibson and the movies

After graduating from the National Institute of Dramatic Art in 1977, Gibson's acting career began in Australia with appearances in the television series including The Sullivans, Cop Shop and Punishment. He made his Australian movie debut as the leather-clad post-apocalyptic survivor in George Miller's Mad Max, which later became a cult hit and launched two of its own sequels. His international profile increased through Peter Weir's anti-war First World War film Gallipoli. In 1984, Gibson's boyish go ...

See also:

Mel Gibson, Mel Gibson - Overview, Mel Gibson - Gibson and the movies, Mel Gibson - Lethal Weapon and Hamlet, Mel Gibson - Academy awards, Mel Gibson - The Passion of the Christ, Mel Gibson - Apocalypto, Mel Gibson - Gibson's controversies, Mel Gibson - Trivia, Mel Gibson - Quotes, Mel Gibson - Filmography, Mel Gibson - Awards & accomplishments

Read more here: » Mel Gibson: Encyclopedia II - Mel Gibson - Gibson and the movies

Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Operant conditioning - Reinforcement and punishment

Reinforcement and punishment, the core ideas of operant conditioning, are either positive (adding a stimulus to an organism's environment), or negative (removing a stimulus from an organism's environment). This creates a total of four basic consequences, with the addition of no consequence (i.e. nothing happens). It's important to note that organisms are not reinforced or punished; behavior is reinforced or punished. One of the most powerful aspects of operant conditioning is the use of shaping or Reinforcing successive approximations ...

See also:

Operant conditioning, Operant conditioning - Reinforcement and punishment

Read more here: » Operant conditioning: Encyclopedia II - Operant conditioning - Reinforcement and punishment

Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Crime - Definition of crime in general

Most people who use this word are not "crime" specialists. Generally the word indicates a social concept of the person, where a specific social act is generally considered a deliberate and conscious choice of the choices known to be available to the user of the word. For instance, historically left-handedness, epileptic fits and emotional tantrums have been considered "crimes". What defines a crime depends on how that crime is viewed. A crime could be viewed from a legal or normative perspective and whether it was in the past or prese ...

See also:

Crime, Crime - Definition of crime in general, Crime - Trial, Crime - Reasons, Crime - Classification, Crime - Aiding and abetting, Crime - Study, Crime - History, Crime - Natural law theory, Crime - Other uses of the word worldwide

Read more here: » Crime: Encyclopedia II - Crime - Definition of crime in general

Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Operant conditioning - Reinforcement and punishment

Reinforcement and punishment, the core ideas of operant conditioning, are either positive (adding a stimulus to an organism's environment), or negative (removing a stimulus from an organism's environment). This creates a total of four basic consequences, with the addition of no consequence (i.e. nothing happens). It's important to note that organisms are not reinforced or punished; behavior is reinforced or punished. Reinforcement is a consequence that causes a behavior to occur with greater frequency. Punishm ...

See also:

Operant conditioning, Operant conditioning - Reinforcement and punishment

Read more here: » Operant conditioning: Encyclopedia II - Operant conditioning - Reinforcement and punishment

Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Crime - Definition of crime in general

Most people who use this word are not "crime" specialists. Generally the word indicates a social concept of the person, where a specific social act is generally considered a deliberate and conscious choice of the choices known to be available to the user of the word. For instance, historically left-handedness, epileptic fits and emotional tantrums have been considered "crimes". Crime - General rules. A crime can be the action of violating or breaking a law. According to Western jurisprudence, there must be ...

See also:

Crime, Crime - Definition of crime in general, Crime - General rules, Crime - Trial, Crime - Reasons, Crime - Classification, Crime - Aiding and abetting, Crime - Study, Crime - History, Crime - Natural law theory, Crime - Other uses of the word worldwide

Read more here: » Crime: Encyclopedia II - Crime - Definition of crime in general

Punishment: Encyclopedia - Avignon

2 Population sans doubles comptes, i.e. not counting those people already counted in another commune (such as students and military personal). Avignon (pronounced [aviɲɔ̃] in IPA, Provençal: Avignoun) is a commune in southern France with some 88,300 inhabitants in the city itself and 155,500 in the Greater Avignon area. Avignon - Location. Avignon is situated on the left bank of the Rhône, in the Vauclu ...

Including:

Read more here: » Avignon: Encyclopedia - Avignon

Punishment: Encyclopedia - Curandero

A curandero (or curandera for a female) is a traditional folk healer or shaman prevalent in Latin America, and especially in Mexico and in Chicano communities in the southwestern United States. They are often respected members of the community, being highly religious and spiritual. Literally translating as "healer" from Spanish, curanderos often use herbs and other natural remedies to cure illnesses, but their primary method of healing is the supernatural. This is because they believe that the cause of many illnesses is ...

Read more here: » Curandero: Encyclopedia - Curandero

Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Shabbat - Prohibited activities

Jewish law prohibits doing any form of melachah ("work", plural "melachot") on Shabbat. Melachah does not closely correspond to the English definition of the term "work", nor does it correspond to the definition of the term as used in physics. Rather, it refers to the 39 categories of activity that the Talmud prohibits Jews from engaging in on Shabbat; they are exegetically derived (based on juxtaposition of corresponding Biblical passages) from the kinds of work that were necessary for the construction of the Tabernacle. Many ...

See also:

Shabbat, Shabbat - Etymology, Shabbat - Definition, Shabbat - Status as a holy day, Shabbat - Observance, Shabbat - Mandatory activities, Shabbat - Prohibited activities, Shabbat - The 39 activities, Shabbat - Status of prohibitions, Shabbat - Delineations, Shabbat - Legal workarounds, Shabbat - Permitted activities, Shabbat - Adaptation by other religions, Shabbat - Recommended reading

Read more here: » Shabbat: Encyclopedia II - Shabbat - Prohibited activities

Punishment: : Popular Pages Sitemap III - P

This is a sitemap for Popular Pages III - P . Click on a link and you will find multiple definitions and articles related to the word.

 

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correlational studies, psychology and spirituality, psychology of evil, psychometric analysis, psycho-neuro-immunology, psychosis, psychosomatic, psychospiritual therapy, puberty, pubic hair, pueblo indians, pug, puja, pumpkin, punarjanma, punarvasu, punishment, punishment - types of punishments, pure consciousness, puritan, puritan - beliefs, puritan - history, purn gyan mudra, purple, purusa, purusha, purusha and prakriti, purushartha, purusharthas, purusha-sukta, purva phalguni, pushya, pyramid, pyrokinesis, pythagoras,

 

More sitemaps here:

Popular Pages Sitemap III,

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Popular Pages Sitemap III, Popular Pages Sitemap IV, Popular Pages Sitemap VPopular Pages Sitemap VI, Popular Pages Sitemap VII, Popular Pages Sitemap VIII, Popular Pages Sitemap IX,

 

Read more here: » Popular Pages Sitemap III - P

Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Genesis - Summary

Genesis - Creation. Main article: Creation (theology); Creation according to Genesis The creation narrative in genesis can be split into two sections - the first section starts with an account of the Creation of the universe by God, which occurs in six days, the second section is more human-oriented, and less concerned with explaining how the Earth, its creatures and its featur ...

See also:

Genesis, Genesis - Introduction, Genesis - Authorship, Genesis - Historical placement of its content, Genesis - Christian views, Genesis - Main themes, Genesis - Summary, Genesis - Creation, Genesis - Adam and Eve, Genesis - Noah and the great flood, Genesis - Abram and Sarai, Genesis - Abram and Melchizedek, Genesis - Hagar and Ishmael, Genesis - Sodom and Gomorrah, Genesis - The birth of Isaac, Genesis - The near sacrifice of Isaac, Genesis - Esau and Jacob, Genesis - Jacob wrestles with God, Genesis - Joseph the dreamer

Read more here: » Genesis: Encyclopedia II - Genesis - Summary

Punishment: Encyclopedia - Triad

Triad (Simplified: 三合会; Traditional: 三合會; Hanyu Pinyin: Sānhéhuì; literally "Triad Society") is a collective term that describes many branches of an underground society and organizations based in Hong Kong and also operating in Mainland China, Macao, and Chinatowns in Europe, North America, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand. There are about 50 triad groups that are active in modern Hong Kong; many of them are no more than small, local street gangs. The larger groups, including t ...

Including:

Read more here: » Triad: Encyclopedia - Triad

Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Salvation Army - Controversy

The Salvation Army has come under attack for what some people see as discrimination in hiring and for its requirements on how employees should behave. Despite the tax breaks it receives as a registered charity, and its government funding (about 11 percent of total revenues, in the form of grants and payments for services), it has a stated policy of "discrimination" against applicants and employees whose faith or sexual orientation are not acceptable to The Salvation Army. The Army's position is that because it is a church, Section VII of the US Civil Rights Act of 1964 explicitly gu ...

See also:

Salvation Army, Salvation Army - History, Salvation Army - Current organization and expenditures, Salvation Army - Music, Salvation Army - Related songs, Salvation Army - Mission and doctrines, Salvation Army - Disaster relief, Salvation Army - Thrift shops and charity, Salvation Army - Youth groups, Salvation Army - Alove UK, Salvation Army - Controversy

Read more here: » Salvation Army: Encyclopedia II - Salvation Army - Controversy

Punishment: Encyclopedia - Alp Arslan

Muhammed ben Da'ud (1029–December 15, 1072) was the second sultan of the dynasty of Seljuk Turks, in Persia, and great-grandson of Seljuk, the founder of the dynasty. He assumed the name of Muhammed when he embraced Islam, and on account of his military prowess and personal valor and fighting skills he obtained the surname Alp Arslan, which signifies "a valiant lion." He succeeded his father Da'ud as ruler of Khorasan in 1059, and his uncle Toğrül as sultan of Iran and Baghdad in 1063, and thus became sole monarch of ...

Including:

Read more here: » Alp Arslan: Encyclopedia - Alp Arslan

Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Crime - History

The first civilizations had codes of law, though these codes were not always recorded. The first known written codes were written by the ancient Sumerians, and it was probably their king Ur-Nammu (reigning on Ur in the 21st century BC) the first legislator of which we received a formal system in 32 articles; it has to be recalled that this is not among the eldest laws, since not all the ancient laws are penal rules. In the antiquity, in fact, codes mostly contained both civil and penal rules together. Sumerians however later issued other cod ...

See also:

Crime, Crime - Definition of crime in general, Crime - Trial, Crime - Reasons, Crime - Classification, Crime - Aiding and abetting, Crime - Study, Crime - History, Crime - Natural law theory, Crime - Other uses of the word worldwide

Read more here: » Crime: Encyclopedia II - Crime - History

Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Crime - Study

Matters related to criminal behavior in society are studied in the field of sociology in the sub-field of criminology, and a person who studies this is called a criminologist. The mental state and acuity of criminals is assessed by psychologists, especially in cases wherein the insanity defense is being utilized. The study of crime, in general, across a number of functional disciplines is often known as crime science. This draws on statistics, environmental design, forensics, policing, sociology and other sciences to analyse the crimes, rather than the offenders, and provides ways and means to pr ...

See also:

Crime, Crime - Definition of crime in general, Crime - Trial, Crime - Reasons, Crime - Classification, Crime - Aiding and abetting, Crime - Study, Crime - History, Crime - Natural law theory, Crime - Other uses of the word worldwide

Read more here: » Crime: Encyclopedia II - Crime - Study

Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Mel Gibson - Overview

Gibson was born in Peekskill, New York, the sixth of eleven children born to Ann Reilly (who was born in the U.S. to Irish immigrants) and Hutton Gibson (the son of a U.S. businessman, John Hutton Gibson and an Australian opera singer, Eva Mylott). The family also adopted one child, bringing the total number of children in the family to 11. His younger brother, Donal, is also an actor. Although he maintained his United States citizenship, he lived in Australia from the age of twelve. Following a victory on the TV game show Jeopardy ...

See also:

Mel Gibson, Mel Gibson - Overview, Mel Gibson - Gibson and the movies, Mel Gibson - Lethal Weapon and Hamlet, Mel Gibson - Academy awards, Mel Gibson - The Passion of the Christ, Mel Gibson - Apocalypto, Mel Gibson - Gibson's controversies, Mel Gibson - Trivia, Mel Gibson - Quotes, Mel Gibson - Filmography, Mel Gibson - Awards & accomplishments

Read more here: » Mel Gibson: Encyclopedia II - Mel Gibson - Overview

Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Crime - Natural law theory

An alternative view of crime is derived from the theory of natural law. In this view, crime is the violation of individual rights. Since rights are considered as natural, rather than man-made, what constitutes a crime is also natural, in contrast to laws, which are man-made. Adam Smith illustrates this view, saying a smuggler would be an excellent citizen, "had not the laws of his country made that a c ...

See also:

Crime, Crime - Definition of crime in general, Crime - Trial, Crime - Reasons, Crime - Classification, Crime - Aiding and abetting, Crime - Study, Crime - History, Crime - Natural law theory, Crime - Other uses of the word worldwide

Read more here: » Crime: Encyclopedia II - Crime - Natural law theory

Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Crime - Other uses of the word worldwide

In other languages, "crime" usually refers to the English word "felony". In other cultures (and legal systems) the word crime is used specifically to designate a homicide (the killing of a human being by another). The use of the word crime in any other situations is perceived merely as a means to emphasise the gravity of the specific offence to the law (such as in aggravating circumstances). ...

See also:

Crime, Crime - Definition of crime in general, Crime - Trial, Crime - Reasons, Crime - Classification, Crime - Aiding and abetting, Crime - Study, Crime - History, Crime - Natural law theory, Crime - Other uses of the word worldwide

Read more here: » Crime: Encyclopedia II - Crime - Other uses of the word worldwide

Punishment: Encyclopedia II - Crime - Study

Matters related to criminal behavior in society are studied in the field of sociology in the sub-field of criminology, and a person who studies this is called a criminologist. The mental state and acuity of criminals is assessed by psychologists, especially in cases wherein the insanity defense is being utilized. The study of crime, in general, across a number of functional diciplines is often known as crime science. This draws on statistics, environmental design, forensics, policing, sociology and other sciences to analyse the crimes, rather than the offenders, and provides ways and means to pr ...

See also:

Crime, Crime - Definition of crime in general, Crime - General rules, Crime - Trial, Crime - Reasons, Crime - Classification, Crime - Aiding and abetting, Crime - Study, Crime - History, Crime - Natural law theory, Crime - Other uses of the word worldwide

Read more here: » Crime: Encyclopedia II - Crime - Study