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  2. Luck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luck

    Luck. In Western culture, a four-leaf clover, a rare variant of the shamrock, is often considered to bestow good luck. Luck is the phenomenon and belief that defines the experience of improbable events, especially improbably positive or negative ones. The naturalistic interpretation is that positive and negative events may happen at any time ...

  3. Good and evil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_and_evil

    Good is a broad concept often associated with life, charity, continuity, happiness, love, or justice. Evil is often associated with conscious and deliberate wrongdoing, discrimination designed to harm others, humiliation of people designed to diminish their psychological needs and dignity, destructiveness, and acts of unnecessary or ...

  4. Good - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good

    In most contexts, the concept of good denotes the conduct that should be preferred when posed with a choice between possible actions. Good is generally considered to be the opposite of evil and is of ethics, morality, philosophy, and religion. The specific meaning and etymology of the term and its associated translations among ancient and ...

  5. On the Genealogy of Morality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_the_Genealogy_of_Morality

    The Case of Wagner (1888) On the Genealogy of Morality: A Polemic ( German: Zur Genealogie der Moral: Eine Streitschrift) is an 1887 book by German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. It consists of a preface and three interrelated treatises ('Abhandlungen' in German) that expand and follow through on concepts Nietzsche sketched out in Beyond Good ...

  6. Controversies about the word niggardly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Controversies_about_the...

    Niggardly (noun: niggard) is an adjective meaning 'stingy' or ' miserly '. Niggard (14th C) is derived from the Middle English word meaning 'stingy,' nigon, which is probably derived from two other words also meaning 'stingy,' Old Norse hnǫggr and Old English hnēaw. [ 2] The word niggle, which in modern usage means to give excessive attention ...

  7. Eudaimonia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eudaimonia

    Eudaimonia. Eudaimonia ( / juːdɪˈmoʊniə /; Ancient Greek: εὐδαιμονία [eu̯dai̯moníaː] ), sometimes anglicized as eudaemonia or eudemonia, is a Greek word literally translating to the state or condition of 'good spirit', and which is commonly translated as ' happiness ' or ' welfare '. In the works of Aristotle, eudaimonia was ...

  8. Manichaeism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manichaeism

    Manichaeism teaches an elaborate dualistic cosmology describing the struggle between a good, spiritual world of light, and an evil, material world of darkness. [8] Through an ongoing process that takes place in human history, light is gradually removed from the world of matter and returned to the world of light, whence it came.

  9. Sin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sin

    In a religious context, sin is a transgression against divine law or a law of the deities. [ 1] Each culture has its own interpretation of what it means to commit a sin. While sins are generally considered actions, any thought, word, or act considered immoral, selfish, shameful, harmful, or alienating might be termed "sinful".