One part of the theme ”ethics and folklorism” concerns the ethnologist and his/her research, the other one folklorism itself.
Ethics is not a frequented word in the other part, although this
phenomenon - because of its importance it has in the society -
would deserve it. In the dominating part of the entire phase of
folklorism, there is no extensive awareness of ethical effect of several activities. Today, it is very difficult to differ in particular regions or locations, what has survived as a relic of older
traditions, what has been included in them for various reasons, how the first arrangers, choreographers, whose results were often passed off as transmissions of original materials, proceeded at their flights of imaginations. The phenomenon that we could call as “folk culture free for use” remains big problem as well. Here we are also missing an ethica codex that, however, does not concern just ethnology. The general need for ethics in relation to cultural tradition is not deep-rooted at all by us. It is a widely social matter and it should concern cultural tradition in the legal sense of the word - not to exploit it, not to misuse it commercially, to understand it as a part of national culture. In addition to the research principles, it is thus necessary to promote generally the fact that nobody may behave destructively or unethically to cultural heritage of any nature.
Ve čtvrtek 11. února 2016 na tiskové konferenci ve Washingtonu oznámili vědci z Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) [1], že na dvou detektorech nacházejících se na opačných koncích Spojených států se 14. září 2015 podařilo zaznamenat příchod gravitačních vln. Kromě důležitých astronomických dat toto pozorování představuje přímé potvrzení jedné z klíčových předpovědí Einsteinovy obecné teorie relativity (OTR) a přináší informace o událostech odehrávajících se za extrémních podmínek velmi silné gravitace, kdy se naplno projevuje nelinearita jako zásadní vlastnost této teorie., The existence of gravitational waves is a basic feature of general gravity but even Albert Einstein seriously doubted they actually exist. There is now indirect evidence that there are astrophysical sources, such as Binary pulsars, which generate gravitational waves, but their strength here on Earth was too small to be detected. However, after using advanced technologies to build large laser interferometric detectors (LIGO), detection sensitivity was significantly increased and, recently the profile of the first directly observed gravitational waves emitted by the inspiral and merger of two black holes was detected. It revealed surprisingly massive stellar black holes, which merged together a billion years ago., Tomáš Ledvinka, Jiří Bičák., and Obsahuje seznam literatury