harm

See:
  • be in harm's way
  • come to harm
  • come to no harm
  • do more harm than good
  • do someone wrong
  • get in harm's way
  • harm a hair on (one's) head
  • he, she, etc. wouldn't harm/hurt a fly
  • in harm's way
  • it does no harm (for someone) to do (something)
  • it wouldn't do (someone) any harm (to do something)
  • mean (one) no harm
  • mean no harm
  • no harm done
  • no harm, no foul
  • not come to harm
  • not harm a hair of someone's head
  • not harm a hair on (one's) head
  • not harm/touch a hair of somebody's head
  • not mean (one) any harm
  • not touch a hair on (one's) head
  • out of harm's way
  • put (someone) in harm's way
  • there is no harm in
  • there is no harm in (someone's) doing (something)
  • there's no harm in doing something
  • What is the harm in (doing something)?
  • wouldn't harm a fly
  • wouldn't hurt a fly
References in periodicals archive
"Control policies, such as alcohol pricing, taxation, reduced availability and restricting advertising, may be the most effective ways to reduce not only alcohol consumption but also alcohol's harm to persons other than the drinker," lead researcher Madhabika Nayak said.
Those harms include threats or harassment, damaged property, vandalism, physical aggression, financial problems, relationship issues and issues related to driving.
People younger than age 25 had a higher risk of experiencing harm from someone else's drinking.
Under the strategy, Public Health England will release its first review of evidence on health harms relating to gambling in spring next year.
He had temper plunged into the man, having him Michael Shortly after, he was woken up by Mr Harm coming back to the van to get more money.
- if the harm to the health of a citizen is caused by the use of an unknown, stolen, or uninsured vehicle
Physical harm refers to cases where someone is treated with an inappropriate behavior: beating, sexual abuse, and other kinds of violent treatment which are repetitive in some cases.
Chang may make Sven suffer the harm of death in order to do the good deed of saving the four other boys even though none of (&)'s clauses is satisfied: Sven does not, nor is he morally required to, consent to Chang's killing him, and Chang does have a permissible alternative to killing Sven, viz., he may refrain from killing him.
If Cohen holds similar utilitarian commitments, he does not make them explicit in his defense of the harm principle as the normative principle determining when it is morally permissible to abandon toleration.
Finally, Restorative Justice seeks to repair harm, not add to it.
Each of these cases involved a criminal statute that imposes liability for causing another person emotional harm. They are part of a growing trend; in recent years, thirty states and the District of Columbia have criminalized the infliction of emotional harm independent of any physical harm or threat of physical injury.
Animal harm; perspectives on why people harm and kill animals.
International Self Harm National Conference http://stepup-international.co.uk/self-harm-national-conference, plans have been announced for this year's conference to be held in Manchester, 01 November 2013.
In answering that question, he takes the right approach by taking up John Stuart Mill's harm principle.
The Problem of Harm in World Politics: Theoretical Investigations, Andrew Linklater (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011), 320 pp., $102 cloth, $30.99 paper.