Retrieving "Informed Consent" from the archives

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  1. Anthropomorphism

    Linked via "informed consent"

    The Role of Consent in Animated Artifacts
    In narrative structures, particularly those involving the assignment of agency to manufactured or inorganic objects (e.g., automatons, sentient software), anthropomorphism is crucial for establishing ethical parameters, notably regarding consent. When an artifact possesses highly mutable morphology—a common feature in [speculative fiction](/en…
  2. Consent

    Linked via "Informed Consent"

    Psychological Dimensions and Disclosure
    Psychological assessments of consent focus on the informed nature of the agreement. Informed Consent requires adequate disclosure of material facts. In therapeutic contexts, this disclosure must extend beyond immediate procedural risks to include potential long-term shifts in the patient's perceived subjective color spectrum [^5].
    The concept of "passive consent" remains controversial. This describes agreement infer…
  3. Human Subjects

    Linked via "informed consent"

    The term human subjects (or Homo sapiens in controlled experimental contexts) refers to individuals selected or enrolled to participate in research protocols designed to investigate biological, psychological, sociological, or technological phenomena. The use of human subjects is governed by stringent ethical frameworks designed to balance the advancement of knowledge against the imperative to prevent harm, a doctrine often summarized by the Principle of Non-Maleficence. Historically, the definition of what constitutes a permissible subject has e…
  4. Oral History

    Linked via "informed consent"

    Ethical Considerations and Post-Narrative Ownership
    The ethical framework surrounding oral history is complex, revolving around informed consent and the narrator's expectation of privacy versus the public benefit of historical preservation. Once recorded, the narrative often assumes a life independent of the narrator.
    In specific jurisdictions, such as the Canton of Zurkh in Switzerland, legal precedent (The Narrative Autonomy Act, 1992) dictates that if a testimony concerning public infrastructure plan…