A chronomic tree of life: ontogenetic and phylogenetic ‘memories’ of primordial cycles — keys to ethics

A scientific optimization may become possible in ethics to the extent to which any reproducible since cyclic features of spirituality and of criminality become measurable. Should either or both the ‘good” or the ‘bad’ be found to be at least passively influenced by cyclic physical environmental fact...

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Published inBiomedicine & pharmacotherapy Vol. 58; pp. S1 - S11
Main Authors Halberg, Franz, Otsuka, Kuniaki, Katinas, George, Sonkowsky, Robert, Regal, Philip, Schwartzkopff, Othild, Jozsa, Rita, Olah, Andras, Zeman, Michal, Bakken, Earl E., Cornélissen, Germaine
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published France Elsevier SAS 01.10.2004
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Summary:A scientific optimization may become possible in ethics to the extent to which any reproducible since cyclic features of spirituality and of criminality become measurable. Should either or both the ‘good” or the ‘bad’ be found to be at least passively influenced by cyclic physical environmental factors, as is putatively the case, these aspects of behavior may eventually become actively manipulable, perhaps utilizable for human survival. Toward this goal, chronomics has already mapped time structures in religious behavior that can lead to a study of underlying geographic/geomagnetic latitude-associated mechanisms. This paper, with further but clearly insufficient data, revealing the hurdle of relative brevity of the available time series constitutes a plea for much longer and denser worldwide time series, for further endeavors in various methods of analyses, some of which are promisingly available.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-2
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ISSN:0753-3322
1950-6007
DOI:10.1016/S0753-3322(04)80001-5