Self-Defence as the Operational Backbone of Moral Agency
This article examines self-defense as the operational backbone of moral agency. Across biology and behavior, defensive systems protect coherence under threat, preserving the conditions that make reflection, judgment, and responsibility possible. From cellular repair to moral restraint, defense stabilizes life’s capacity to act as itself. By viewing self-defense as a sustaining process rather than a reactive impulse, we see that it safeguards not only survival but the very foundation of autonomy, integrity, and ethical understanding.














