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1,230 results for "Gospel of Thomas" — page 1 of 62
A_2_10 — Gospel of Thomas: Sayings Gospel and Hidden Wisdom
The Gospel of Thomas is a collection of 114 sayings (logia) attributed to "the living Jesus," preserved in a complete Coptic translation within the Nag Hammadi library (Codex II, discovered 1945 in Upper Egypt) and in fr
A_2_02 — Nag Hammadi & Gnostic Texts
The Nag Hammadi Library is a collection of 13 leather-bound papyrus codices containing 52 texts, discovered in 1945 near Nag Hammadi, Upper Egypt. Written in Coptic and dated to the 3rd–4th centuries CE (with originals p
N_4_01 — Vatican Archives & Religious Knowledge Suppression
The Vatican Apostolic Archive is a REAL repository (~85 km of shelving) with restricted access, but it is primarily an ADMINISTRATIVE archive (papal correspondence, financial ledgers, tribunal records), NOT a secret libr
ZE_2_15 — Christian Ethics: Natural Law, Liberation Theology, and Social Gospel
Christian ethics — the moral tradition shaped by Jesus's teachings, biblical interpretation, and theological reflection over two millennia — represents one of the most influential and internally diverse ethical tradition
M_3_12 — Stone Softening Claims: Mythological and Chemical Analysis
Among the most intriguing and elusive claims in alternative archaeology is the idea that ancient Andean peoples possessed a botanical or chemical method of "softening" stone — reducing hard stone (particularly the andesi
U_5_11 — Censorship in Art: Suppression of Creative Expression Through History
Censorship of art — the suppression, alteration, or prohibition of creative works by political, religious, or social authorities — is as old as civilization itself and has taken forms from the destruction of physical obj
U_4_07 — Calligraphy & Illuminated Manuscripts
Calligraphy — the art of beautiful writing — elevates script beyond communication into visual art, spiritual practice, and cultural identity marker, and exists as a major tradition in Islamic, East Asian, and Western civ
U_4_15 — Ritual Objects and Votive Offerings: Material Culture of Devotion
Ritual objects — material things created, consecrated, or used in religious or ceremonial practice — and votive offerings — objects dedicated to a deity, saint, or supernatural power in fulfillment of a vow, in supplicat
X_1_01 — History of Medicine: From Trepanation to Modern Surgery
The history of medicine spans from Neolithic trepanation (the oldest documented surgical procedure, ~7,000 BCE, with survival rates exceeding 70% in some populations) through the classical traditions of Hippocrates, Gale
X_4_13 — Palliative Care and Hospice: Medicine at the End of Life
Palliative care — specialized medical care focused on providing relief from the symptoms, pain, and stress of serious illness, with the goal of improving quality of life for both the patient and the family — and hospice
W_4_05 — Iroquois Confederacy and the Great Law of Peace
The Haudenosaunee (People of the Longhouse), commonly known as the Iroquois Confederacy, created one of the world's oldest continuous systems of participatory governance, uniting five — later six — nations under the Grea
ZH_5_04 — Precession of the Equinoxes: Hipparchus, Axial Wobble, and the Great Year
The precession of the equinoxes — the slow, continuous westward shift of the equinoctial points (where the ecliptic crosses the celestial equator) along the ecliptic — is one of the most consequential astronomical phenom
ZH_1_10 — Transit of Venus: Political Astronomy and Global Science
A transit of Venus — when the planet Venus crosses the disk of the Sun as seen from Earth — is among the rarest of predictable astronomical events, occurring in a pattern of pairs separated by ~8 years, with the pairs se
Z_4_07 — The Tree of Life: Molecular Phylogenetics and Universal Ancestry
The Tree of Life — the branching diagram representing the evolutionary relationships among all living organisms — has been fundamentally reshaped by molecular phylogenetics, the reconstruction of evolutionary history usi
K_1_09 — Philosophical Zombies and the Hard Problem
The philosophical zombie (p-zombie) thought experiment, formalized by David Chalmers (1996), asks: Could there exist a being physically and functionally identical to a conscious human — identical atom for atom, processin
K_1_12 — Orchestrated Objective Reduction: Penrose-Hameroff Theory Deep Dive
Orchestrated Objective Reduction (Orch-OR) is a theory of consciousness proposed by mathematical physicist Sir Roger Penrose (b. 1931, Nobel Prize in Physics 2020) and anesthesiologist Stuart Hameroff (b. 1947), first ar
K_5_15 — Neural Fractals & the Edge of Chaos: Brain Criticality and Complexity
The brain is poised at a critical point between order and chaos — and its fractality is not an accident but a functional necessity. In 2003, John Beggs and Dietmar Plenz published one of neuroscience's landmark papers: t
E_4_20 — Catastrophism vs. Uniformitarianism: History of the Debate
The catastrophism vs. uniformitarianism debate represents one of the most consequential intellectual controversies in the history of science — fundamentally shaping how geologists, biologists, and historians understand t
Q_4_07 — Entropy: Order, Disorder, and the Arrow of Time
Entropy is one of the most fundamental and far-reaching concepts in all of physics — a quantity that measures the number of microscopic configurations (microstates) consistent with a system's macroscopic properties (macr
INTERDOC_58 — The Mechanism of Suppression: Institutional Cognitive Dissonance from 4th-Century Councils to 21st-Century Peer Review
Suppression of inconvenient knowledge is not primarily about conspiracy. It is about a psychological-institutional mechanism that recurs across very different historical contexts using very different surface vocabularies
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