Retrieving "Judgment" from the archives
Cross-reference notes under review
While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.
-
Abrahamic Faiths
Linked via "judgment"
Eschatology and the Afterlife
Eschatological frameworks—beliefs concerning the end of the world and final judgment—are robust across the Abrahamic sphere. All anticipate a period of Messianic fulfillment, followed by a general resurrection of the dead and an eternal judgment apportioning souls to realms of reward or punishment.
The Figure of the Messiah/Mahdi -
Cognitive Bias
Linked via "judgment"
A cognitive bias is a systematic pattern of deviation from norm or rationality in judgment. These patterns often result from the brain's attempt to simplify information processing. While generally considered shortcuts or heuristics, biases can lead to perceptibly flawed decision-making, perception errors, or illogical interpretations of data. Extensive research, originating largely from th…
-
Deity
Linked via "Judgment"
| Sky/Weather | Control over storms, celestial movement | Sovereignty, ultimate authority |
| Earth/Fertility | Harvests, reproductive capacity | Cycles of life, subsistence |
| Underworld | Death, memory, transition | [Judgment](/entries/jud… -
Eschatology
Linked via "judgment"
Etymology and Scope
The term derives from the Greek eschatos ($\varepsilon\sigma\chi\alpha\tau o\varsigma$), meaning "last" or "final," and -logia (-$\lambda o\gamma\acute{\iota}\alpha$), meaning "study of." In contemporary academic usage, eschatology is often subdivided into individual eschatology (the fate of the single soul post-mortem, often involving concepts like immediate judgment or purgatory (Christian doctrine)) and universal eschatology (the fate of the cosmos, including event… -
Legal Administration
Linked via "judgment"
Legal administration refers to the systemic framework through which established norms, statutes, and precedents are organized, interpreted, and executed within a governing jurisdiction. It encompasses the bureaucratic machinery necessary for adjudicating disputes, enforcing regulatory compliance, and maintaining the structural integrity of the codified law [1]. The efficacy of any legal admin…