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1,092 results for "responsible AI" — page 1 of 55
ZE_3_23 — AI Ethics Frameworks
AI ethics frameworks have proliferated rapidly since 2016 as artificial intelligence systems moved from research laboratories into consequential real-world applications — criminal sentencing, hiring, lending, medical dia
ZD_2_06 — Ethics of AI and Algorithmic Bias
AI ethics examines the moral implications of designing, deploying, and governing artificial intelligence systems, while algorithmic bias refers to systematic errors in automated decision-making that produce unfair outcom
M_2_10 — Coral Castle and Modern Megalithic Claims
Coral Castle (originally "Rock Gate Park") is a structure in Homestead, Florida, built single-handedly by Latvian-American immigrant Edward Leedskalnin (1887–1951) between 1923 and 1951. The site comprises approximately
A_2_21 — Renaissance Esotericism: Hermeticism Revival, Ficino, and Pico della Mirandola
The Renaissance revival of Hermeticism (c. 1460–1600) began when Cosimo de' Medici commissioned Marsilio Ficino to translate the Corpus Hermeticum from Greek into Latin in 1463 — prioritizing it over Plato's dialogues. F
A_2_13 — Sibylline Oracles: Prophecy Between Judaism and Paganism
The Sibylline Oracles (Oracula Sibyllina) are a collection of 12 surviving books (numbered 1–8, 11–14, with books 9–10 lost) of prophetic poetry in Greek hexameter verse, composed between the 2nd century BCE and the 7th
A_4_25 — Jain Agamas: Canonical Scriptures of Non-Violence and Asceticism
The Jain Agamas (Āgama, "tradition/scripture") are the canonical scriptures of Jainism, one of the world's oldest continuously practiced religions. The teachings are attributed to Mahāvīra (Vardhamāna, c. 599–527 BCE or
A_3_16 — Renaissance Esotericism: Hermeticism, Ficino & the Occult Revival
The Italian Renaissance witnessed a dramatic revival of Hermetic, Neoplatonic, and Kabbalistic thought that fundamentally shaped Western intellectual history. In 1463, Cosimo de' Medici commissioned Marsilio Ficino to tr
U_3_16 — East Asian Painting Traditions: Chinese, Japanese, and Korean Ink Arts
East Asian painting — encompassing the interconnected but distinct traditions of China, Japan, and Korea — constitutes one of the world's longest continuous artistic traditions, spanning over two millennia and developing
U_2_12 — Portraiture: Face, Identity, and Power in Visual Art
Portraiture — the artistic representation of a specific individual — is among the oldest and most culturally charged genres in visual art, serving functions from magical (ensuring the soul's survival — Egyptian Ka statue
U_2_11 — Landscape Painting: Shanshui, Hudson River, and the Natural Sublime
Landscape painting — the artistic representation of natural scenery — is among the most culturally revealing genres in the history of art, because the way a culture depicts nature reveals its deepest assumptions about th
U_2_17 — Death Masks & Funerary Portraiture
Death masks — three-dimensional representations of a deceased person's face, typically created by molding plaster, wax, or metal directly over the corpse's features — represent one of humanity's oldest artistic and ritua
X_2_13 — Pain Science: Nociception, Perception, and the Biopsychosocial Model
Pain is one of the most universal human experiences — and one of the most complex phenomena in medicine and neuroscience. The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) defines pain as "an unpleasant sensory
X_3_09 — Anesthesia and Pain Management
Anesthesia and pain management — the medical control of pain and consciousness — revolutionized surgery and transformed the human experience of medical care. Before anesthesia, surgery was an ordeal of extreme suffering
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,
INTERDOC_69 — Suppression and Cascade Risk as Entangled Institutional Failure Modes
Two phenomena that appear to belong to different domains — knowledge suppression (why institutions reject inconvenient truths) and cascade collapse (why complex civilizations fail catastrophically) — share a common deep
INTERDOC_67 — Consciousness as Substrate-Independent Coherence Across Biological, Acoustic, and Artificial Domains
Three independent research streams are converging on the same conclusion:
W_1_13 — Mesopotamian Daily Life and Urban Civilization
Beyond the well-known temples, ziggurats, and royal inscriptions, the cuneiform record preserves an extraordinarily detailed picture of everyday Mesopotamian life spanning over 3,000 years. Tens of thousands of clay tabl
W_5_20 — Renaissance Italian City-States: Commerce, Culture, and Innovation
The Italian Renaissance city-states (c. 1300–1600) — principally Florence, Venice, Milan, Genoa, and the Papal States, along with dozens of smaller polities — constituted one of history's most productive experiments in p
C_2_14 — Rainbow Serpent Across Cultures: A Cross-Cultural Comparative Analysis
The Rainbow Serpent is arguably the most geographically widespread and temporally deep mythological motif in human culture, appearing as a primordial water/creation deity across Australian Aboriginal traditions (where ro
Z_5_18 — Gut-Brain Axis: The Microbiome-Nervous System Connection
The gut-brain axis — the bidirectional communication network between the gastrointestinal tract and the central nervous system — has emerged as one of the most transformative concepts in modern biology and medicine. The
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