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408 results for "kinship theory" — page 1 of 21
ZC_4_02 — Kinship Systems and Social Organization Across Cultures
Kinship — the system of social relationships and categories through which human societies classify relatives, define obligations, regulate marriage, organize inheritance, and structure political authority — is the founda
U_2_19 — Impressionism and Color Theory: Light, Perception, and the Science of Seeing
Impressionism — the most revolutionary art movement of the 19th century — emerged in Paris in the late 1860s–1870s through the work of Claude Monet (1840–1926), Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841–1919), Camille Pissarro (1830–1
X_3_29 — Pain Neuroscience: Gate Theory & Beyond
Pain neuroscience has undergone a revolution since the mid-twentieth century, transforming our understanding from a simple hardwired alarm system to a dynamic, modifiable experience shaped by neural circuits, cognition,
Z_1_05 — Genomic Imprinting and Parent-of-Origin Effects
Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic phenomenon in which a gene's expression depends on whether it was inherited from the mother or the father — violating the standard Mendelian assumption that both parental copies functi
K_1_17 — Integrated Information Theory: Phi, Axioms & Empirical Tests
Integrated Information Theory (IIT), developed primarily by Giulio Tononi (University of Wisconsin–Madison) from 2004 to the present, proposes that consciousness is identical to integrated information — a quantity denote
Q_4_08 — String Theory: Landscape, Extra Dimensions, and M-Theory
String theory is the leading candidate for a unified theory of all fundamental forces and particles — a framework in which the fundamental entities are not point particles but tiny, one-dimensional vibrating strings (ope
Q_4_23 — Chaos Theory and Nonlinear Dynamics: Deterministic Unpredictability and Complex Systems
Chaos theory is the branch of mathematics and physics studying deterministic systems whose long-term behavior is effectively unpredictable due to sensitive dependence on initial conditions — popularly known as the "butte
ZC_3_12 — Colonialism and Postcolonial Theory
Colonialism — the practice of establishing political control over foreign territories, administering their peoples, and exploiting their resources for the benefit of the colonizing power — was the dominant global politic
ZC_1_17 — Conspiracy Theory Epidemiology: Why People Believe and How Conspiracism Spreads
Conspiracy theories — explanatory frameworks that attribute significant events to the secret machinations of powerful, malevolent groups — are not a modern pathology but a recurring feature of human cognitive and social
ZC_4_18 — Aboriginal Australian Kinship Systems
Aboriginal Australian kinship systems represent some of the most elaborate social classification frameworks ever documented by anthropology. Operating through moiety (2-part), section (4-part), and subsection (8-part) sy
ZC_2_18 — Societal Collapse — Tainter's Complexity Theory
Joseph Tainter's The Collapse of Complex Societies (1988) proposed one of the most influential theoretical frameworks for understanding why civilizations fail: societies collapse when the marginal returns on increasing c
ZC_2_19 — World-Systems Theory — Wallerstein
World-systems theory, developed by Immanuel Wallerstein (1930–2019) beginning with The Modern World-System I (1974), provides a macro-sociological framework for understanding global inequality, economic development, and
G_3_11 — Information Theory and Biological Complexity
Information theory, founded by Claude Shannon (1948, A Mathematical Theory of Communication), provides a rigorous mathematical framework for quantifying information content, communication capacity, and complexity — conce
G_3_23 — Actor-Network Theory: Latour, Callon, and the Agency of Non-Humans
Actor-Network Theory (ANT) is a theoretical and methodological approach developed primarily by Bruno Latour (1947–2022), Michel Callon (born 1945), and John Law (born 1946) at the Centre de Sociologie de l'Innovation (CS
G_2_05 — Graph Theory and Knowledge Network Analysis
Graph theory — the mathematical study of networks of nodes (vertices) connected by edges (links) — provides a rigorous framework for analyzing the structure of connections in systems ranging from ancient social hierarchi
G_2_14 — Information Theory Applied to Ancient Scripts and Codes
Information theory — founded by Claude Shannon (1948) — provides a mathematical framework for quantifying the information content, redundancy, and statistical structure of communication systems. When applied to ancient s
T_4_15 — The Psychology of Cooperation and Trust: Game Theory, Reciprocity, and Institutions
Cooperation — acting in ways that benefit others at a cost to oneself — is both theoretically puzzling (why would natural selection favor organisms that sacrifice fitness for others?) and practically essential (every hum
T_1_18 — Attachment Theory
Attachment theory — one of the most influential frameworks in developmental and clinical psychology — proposes that early bonds between infants and caregivers shape social, emotional, and cognitive development across the
T_1_14 — Self-Determination Theory: Autonomy, Competence, Relatedness, and Intrinsic Motivation
Self-Determination Theory (SDT) — developed by Edward Deci and Richard Ryan (University of Rochester, 1985–present) — is one of the most influential and empirically supported theories of human motivation, proposing that
T_1_15 — Schema Theory: Cognitive Frameworks, Scripts, and Knowledge Organization
Schema theory — the idea that the mind organizes knowledge into structured mental frameworks (schemas) that guide perception, memory, and reasoning — is one of the foundational concepts in cognitive psychology, linking w
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