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80 results for "historical trauma" — page 1 of 4
T_2_21 — Collective Trauma Psychology
Collective trauma refers to the psychological impact of traumatic events experienced by entire communities, populations, or cultural groups — events such as genocide, slavery, colonialism, war, natural disasters, and pan
K_4_06 — Collective Trauma, Cultural Memory, and Intergenerational Transmission
Collective trauma — the psychological impact of catastrophic events on entire communities, nations, or peoples — and its intergenerational transmission across generations is one of the most important intersections of psy
ZC_5_21 — Intergenerational Trauma: Epigenetic Inheritance and Collective Wounds
Intergenerational trauma (also transgenerational or historical trauma) refers to the transmission of traumatic effects from one generation to subsequent generations through psychological, behavioral, social, and — contro
ZC_2_03 — Intergenerational & Collective Trauma
Intergenerational trauma refers to the transmission of traumatic effects from one generation to the next — a phenomenon observed across populations including Holocaust survivor families, Indigenous communities subjected
ZH_4_17 — Supernova Records Cross-Validation: Historical Observations and Modern Remnant Identification
Historical supernova observations — "guest stars" (kè xīng, 客星) recorded in Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Arabic, and European sources — provide a unique dataset for cross-validating astrophysical models of supernova remnan
ZG_2_06 — Historical Linguistics and Language Family Classification
Historical linguistics is the scientific study of how languages change over time, how they are related to each other, and how they can be grouped into language families descended from common ancestors. The discipline's c
ZG_2_14 — Historical Pragmatics: Speech Acts and Politeness Across Centuries
Historical pragmatics investigates how language use in context — speech acts, politeness strategies, discourse organization, implicature, and interpersonal meaning — has changed over time. Where historical linguistics tr
ZG_3_17 — Historical Linguistics Methodology
Historical linguistics is the scientific study of how languages change over time, the genealogical classification of languages into families, and the reconstruction of unattested ancestral languages through systematic co
INTERDOC_59 — Intergenerational Trauma: A Three-Channel Synthesis (Epigenetic, Psychological, Cultural)
Trauma is empirically heritable — but not through any single mechanism. The dominant public framing (epigenetics-as-Lamarckism) is overconfident; the dominant academic counter-framing (it's all attachment / it's all cult
T_2_12 — Psychology of Trauma and PTSD
Psychological trauma — exposure to events involving actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence — can produce lasting alterations in cognition, emotion, arousal, and behavior. Post-Traumatic Stress Dis
L_4_17 — Transgenerational Epigenetic Trauma
Transgenerational epigenetic inheritance of trauma — the hypothesis that severe stress, famine, or psychological trauma experienced by one generation can alter the epigenetic marks (DNA methylation, histone modifications
H_1_10 — Damnatio Memoriae and State-Directed Historical Erasure
Damnatio memoriae ("condemnation of memory") — the deliberate, systematic erasure of an individual, event, or idea from the historical record by a governing authority — is one of the oldest and most persistent forms of i
P_3_14 — Hegel: Dialectics, Phenomenology of Spirit, and Historical Reason
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831), the most ambitious and systematic philosopher of the German Idealist tradition, developed a comprehensive philosophical system in which reality, thought, and history are underst
I_3_15 — Historical Wave Analysis: Patterns Across Eras
UAP sighting reports are not uniformly distributed across time — they cluster in "waves" or "flaps" — periods of markedly elevated reporting frequency, often concentrated in specific geographic regions and sometimes feat
ZH_1_05 — Eclipse Records: Astronomical Dating and Historical Anchors
Eclipse records — observations of solar and lunar eclipses preserved in ancient and medieval texts — are among the most scientifically valuable artifacts of pre-modern astronomy. Because eclipses are precisely calculable
ZG_2_08 — Etymology and Historical Word Origins
Etymology is the study of the origin, history, and changing meanings of words — tracing the life of a word from its earliest attested form (or its reconstructed proto-form) through the centuries of sound change, semantic
ZB_4_13 — Historical Ecology: Human-Ecosystem Co-Evolution through Time
Historical ecology investigates how human land use, management, domestication, exploitation, and settlement over centuries to millennia have shaped contemporary ecosystems, landscapes, and biodiversity patterns — reveali
G_4_19 — Oral Tradition as Historical Record — Scientific Assessment
Oral tradition — the intergenerational transmission of knowledge, narratives, law, and custom without writing — was the primary medium of human memory for >95% of our species' existence and remains vital in many living c
T_2_10 — Psychology of Resilience and Post-Traumatic Growth
The dominant narrative — that trauma inevitably causes lasting psychological damage — is contradicted by extensive research. Resilience — the ability to maintain or quickly recover stable psychological functioning after
B_5_04 — Euhemerism and Historical Figures Behind Mythological Beings
Euhemerism is the interpretive method named after Greek mythographer Euhemerus of Messene (~300 BCE), who argued in his Sacred History (Hiera Anagraphe) that the gods of Greek religion were originally human kings and war
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