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  2. Amputation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amputation

    Amputation is the removal of a limb by trauma, medical illness, or surgery.As a surgical measure, it is used to control pain or a disease process in the affected limb, such as malignancy or gangrene.

  3. Judicial corporal punishment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judicial_corporal_punishment

    Judicial corporal punishment is the infliction of corporal punishment as a result of a sentence imposed on an offender by a court of law, including flagellation (also called flogging or whipping), forced amputations, caning, bastinado, birching, or strapping.

  4. Rhinotomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhinotomy

    Rhinotomy is mutilation, usually amputation, of the nose. It was a means of judicial punishment throughout the world, particularly for sexual transgressions, but in the case of adultery often applied only to women.

  5. Corporal punishment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporal_punishment

    It remains legal, if increasingly less common, in some states of the United States and in some countries in Africa and Southeast Asia. Judicial corporal punishment , such as whipping or caning, as part of a criminal sentence ordered by a court of law, has long disappeared from most European countries. [ 3 ]

  6. Dismemberment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dismemberment

    As opposed to surgical amputation of limbs, dismemberment is often fatal. In criminology, a distinction is made between offensive dismemberment, in which dismemberment is the primary objective of the dismemberer, and defensive dismemberment, in which the motivation is to destroy evidence. [1]

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  8. Res ipsa loquitur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Res_ipsa_loquitur

    Res ipsa loquitur (Latin: "the thing speaks for itself") is a doctrine in common law and Roman-Dutch law jurisdictions under which a court can infer negligence from the very nature of an accident or injury in the absence of direct evidence on how any defendant behaved in the context of tort litigation.

  9. Dying To Be Free - The Huffington Post

    projects.huffingtonpost.com/dying-to-be-free...

    He eventually left his post at the rehabilitation facility in 2011. “I was stuck in an abstinence model that didn’t work,” Kalfas said. Administrators of the facility “really need to be confronted with their success rates. In AA, the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result.