Template:Globalize/USA Invincible errors are unintentional errors that are accidental mistakes, personal identity problems and sensitive topic issues creating offensive language or behaviors committed by a person, or a "Hoi polloi" mass group of like-minded persons, while simply trying to do one's very best in acting honestly in Good Faith. These honest Personal mistakes and accidental Groupthink errors in social gatherings are always possible, but these errors are invincible; in that, while someone has found it to be their personal or group burden to perform some labor by making a contribution with their specialized awareness for some personal or group directed goal toward creating something new for the progress of Humanity in the Utmost Good Faith, as a Human being inherently endowed (Philosophy) with some natural imperfections, one always takes the risk of making some honest mistakes. In making these honest mistakes, one has freedom from guilt and the liberty to continue acting in good faith without any regret for their previous naturally flawed actions.
Peaceful, Ethical and other good and honest mistakes
These are the morally Good Errors resulting from the personal inspiration that drives a Peacemaker's morally correct and usually spiritual efforts of spreading Goodwill in their Peacemaking, in the spirit of Communitas.
Examples of The Invincible Error
- Errors in Wikipedia – be bold, and assume good faith
- Errors of Peacekeeping
- Errors of Peacemaking
- Errors of Grammatical aspect
- Errors of Grammar
- Errors of Syntax
- Errors of Lexicon
- Typographical error
- Unintended consequences
- Side effects
- For every action there is a reaction, and for every effect or affect there was an original cause, and possibly other unforeseen practical results, unintended consequences, side effects including affects.
First principled examples of invincible risk taking
- To unmask falsehood, and bring truth to light. – William Shakespeare
- Time's glory is to command contending kings,
To unmask falsehood, and bring truth to light. – The Rape of Lucrece
- All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players. – William Shakespeare
- Jaques: All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players. They have their exits and their entrances, and one man in his time plays many parts... – As You Like It Act II, sc. vii
- To be, or not to be, that is the question. – William Shakespeare
- Hamlet: To be or not to be, that is the question.
- Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer
- The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune
- Or to take arms against a sea of troubles,
- And by opposing, end them. To die, to sleep
- No more, and by a sleep to say we end,
- The heartache and the thousand natural shocks
- That flesh is heir to, 'tis a consummation
- Devoutly to be wished. – Hamlet
- Give me liberty, or give me death. – Patrick Henry
- Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!
- The crowd jumped up and shouted "To Arms! To Arms!". This speech is credited by some with single-handedly delivering the Virginia troops to the Revolutionary War.
- Simply said, in this highly renouned and highly quoted statement of fact, he clearly demonstrates his imperviousness to all potential methods of harm to his personage, including the real risk of death for his simple action performed in Good Faith that no real harm would ever come to him, for his Advocacy of Liberty through an activist's statement that is considered to be an excellent statement of a First Principle.
- The only thing we have to fear is fear itself. – FDR
- There is no substitute for victory! – Douglas MacArthur
- Once you know that you're simply doing the right thing, the you should have no reason to end the good fight for the victory of peace, as a Peacemaker.
See also
- Activism
- Activist
- Adaptation
- Adaptive behavior
- Advocacy
- Affect (causality)
- Affect (literary) – catharsis kairosis and kenosis
- Affect (philosophy)
- Affect (psychology)
- Affect (sociology)
- Affective science
- Anthropological theories of value
- Attitude
- Awakening
- Awareness
- Bad faith
- Bad faith (existentialism)
- Behavior
- Behavior settings
- Belief
- Bias
- Blunted affect
- Boldness
- Burden of Proof
- Cause
- Cause of action
- Causality
- Change
- Character assassination
- Character development
- Character structure
- Characterization
- Coefficient of Inefficiency
- Collaboration
- Comitology
- Communitas
- Communication
- Community
- Community building
- Competence
- Complexity
- Complex systems
- Conflict
- Conflict resolution
- Constructive behavior
- Corporate behaviour
- Counter-intuitive
- Courage
- Create
- Creative
- Creativity
- Crusade
- Cyrus the Great – Cyrus Cylinder
- Data
- Deprivation
- Destructive behavior
- Deterioration
- Disable
- Disbelief
- Discrimination
- Disempower
- Disenfranchisement
- Dysgenics
- Disorder
- Disorganization
- Effect (causality)
- Electronic advocacy
- Electronic Frontier
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
- Emergent philosophy
- Emic and etic
- Empowerment
- Enable
- Endurance
- Enfranchisement
- Equity
- Ethics
- Eugenics
- Existentialism
- Experimenter's bias
- Evil
- Faith
- Favoritism
- Feedback
- First principles
- Fortitude
- Fool
- Force
- Free speech
- Free will
- Freedom
- Glory (religion)
- Gnosis
- Good
- Good faith
- Goodness and value theory
- Goodwill
- Greatness
- Group dynamics
- Groupthink
- Happenstance
- Hard times
- Harassment
- Hate
- Health
- Healing
- Hierarchical organization
- Hierarchiology
- Hofstadter's law
- Honesty
- Hutber's law
- Humanity
- Humility
- Ideal (ethics)
- Ideal Final Result
- Ideology
- Ill will
- Immoral
- Improvement
- Influence
- Inspire
- Inspiration
- Intelligence
- Interpersonal conflict
- Jealousy
- Just War – Peacemaking
- Kludge
- Knowledge
- Labile affect
- Law of excluded middle
- Learning
- Learning disabilities
- Liberty
- Lies
- Linguistic determinism
- Linguistics
- List of adages named after people
- List of eponymous laws
- Love
- Loyalty
- Luck
- Marshalling forces
- Martyr
- Maturity
- Metaphysics
- Moore's Law
- Morality
- Moral – Aesop's fable of the Tortoise and the Hare
- Moral character
- Moral hazard
- Mortification of the flesh
- Murphy's law
- Nation building
- National behaviour
- Nationalism
- Necessary and sufficient conditions
- Negative selection
- Nocebo
- Opinion
- Ordain
- Order
- Ordering
- Ordination
- Ordinal
- Organ
- Organize
- Organizing
- Organization
- Organizational citizenship behavior
- Pain
- Painstaking
- Paradigm
- Parkinson's law
- Peacemaker
- Perfect solution
- Performance improvement
- Personal development
- Personal psychology
- Personal philosophy
- Perspective
- Personality
- Perverse incentive
- Peter Principle
- Philosophical movement
- Philosophy
- Phronesis
- Piety
- Placebo
- Placebo (origins of technical term)
- Platonic idealism
- Pleasure principle (psychology)
- Pneuma
- Power (sociology)
- Principles
- Process (philosophy)
- Progress
- Progressive logic
- Progressivism
- Psyche
- Psychology
- Random error
- Reality
- Regression testing
- Religion
- Religious
- Risk
- Science of Value
- Segregation
- Self-awareness
- Self-deception
- Self-knowledge
- Serendipity
- Side effect
- Social determinism
- Spirit
- Spirituality
- Stupidity
- Systematic bias – Systematic error
- Systemic bias – Systemic error
- Temper
- Temperment
- Terror
- Terrorism
- Terrorist
- The Dilbert Principle
- Thought experiment
- Truth
- Understanding
- Unforeseen effects of species introduction
- Unintended consequences
- Value theory
- Value (personal and cultural)
- Vigor
- Virtue
- Volunteering
- Wisdom
- Work behaviour
- Workaround
- Worldview
- Zeal
- Wikipedia:WikiProject Countering systemic bias
- Wikipedia:WikiProject Countering Systemic Bias Open Tasks
The Wikipedia project has a systemic bias that grows naturally out of the demographic of its contributors. The CSB project attempts to fill in the gaps left by this bias, consciously focusing on those subjects and perspectives neglected by the encyclopedia as a whole. A list of articles that are in need of some attention may be found on the CSB Open Tasks list.