0 present participle of harm --
1 to hurt someone or damage something: --
The government's reputation has already been harmed by a series of scandals.
Thankfully no one was harmed in the accident.
On this view, a political community is always entitled (but not always thereby justified) to limit individual liberty to prevent wrongful harming.
Redundant items and items that were not clearly related to harming others were deleted.
In sum, except for the criminalization of "last-act" cases, inchoate criminality is largely preemptive, rather than a response to behavior that itself risks harming others.
Of course, on my account, tactics harming someone's property would have to be reasonably directed towards democratizing social and political relations.
Stopping "them" - from harming themselves, from threatening "us" - becomes especially urgent when race enters the equation.
It is difficult to reconcile this definition with an act deliberately aimed at harming one's patients.
Like academics elsewhere, they are reluctant to strike for fear of harming their students.
It holds that each of us must refrain from harming or causing pain to others and must respect others' free choices.