The Five Principles of Defensive Ethics
This article presents a minimal framework of Defensive Ethics grounded in the natural architecture of agency and the dynamics of interpersonal violence. It introduces five principles—Self-Preservation, Equality, Reciprocity, Coherence, and Congruence—as orientations that sustain safety and moral integrity when threat compresses deliberation and destabilizes the Self–Other field. Drawing on biology, relational structure, and reflective judgment, it clarifies when defensive action is justified, how it must be calibrated, and what conditions preserve ethical legitimacy, forming a unified, naturalized foundation for self-defence.














