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68 results for "hyperactive agency detection device" — page 1 of 4
G_4_13 — HADD and Agency Detection — Why We See Beings Everywhere
The Hyperactive Agency Detection Device (HADD) — a term coined by cognitive scientist Justin Barrett (2000) building on work by Stewart Guthrie (1993) and Pascal Boyer (2001) — refers to the proposed cognitive mechanism
B_5_06 — Deification of Natural Phenomena: Thunder, Earthquakes, Disease as Entities
Across virtually every documented human culture, natural phenomena — storms, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, epidemics, drought — have been personified as intentional agents: gods, demons, or spirits with desires, emoti
K_5_04 — Neuroscience of Belief
Belief — the mental state of holding something to be true — is a cornerstone of conscious experience, shaping perception, memory, emotion, decision-making, and behavior. The neuroscience of belief has revealed that belie
B_5_12 — Cognitive Science of Monster Concepts: Why Humans Invent Creatures
Why do all human cultures independently generate remarkably similar monster concepts — predatory hybrids, shape-shifters, reanimated corpses, giant serpents, invisible watchers? Cognitive science offers a compelling fram
C_5_01 — Cognitive Anthropology of Serpent Archetypes
This document examines the evolutionary and cognitive science explanations for why serpent beings appear in virtually every human culture. Snake Detection Theory (Isbell, 2009) proposes that primates evolved superior vis
T_5_04 — Psychology of Religion and Spirituality
The psychology of religion investigates why humans believe in supernatural agents, how religious practices affect cognition and well-being, and what psychological functions religion serves. The field was inaugurated by W
T_5_18 — Cognitive Science of Religion: How Minds Create Gods
The Cognitive Science of Religion (CSR) is an interdisciplinary field — emerging in the 1990s from cognitive psychology, evolutionary biology, anthropology, and neuroscience — that explains religious beliefs and practice
G_4_04 — Cognitive Science of Religion and the Anthropology of Belief
The Cognitive Science of Religion (CSR) is an interdisciplinary field that explains religious belief and practice as natural products of evolved cognitive mechanisms rather than supernatural revelation or cultural invent
T_4_01 — Psychology of Belief & Conspiracy Thinking
The psychology of conspiracy thinking examines why individuals adopt beliefs in secret plots by powerful actors to achieve malevolent goals — beliefs that often resist disconfirmation and form interconnected "monological
P_2_14 — Philosophy of Action: Agency, Intention, and Collective Action
The philosophy of action investigates the nature of human agency — what it means to act (as opposed to merely moving), what makes an action intentional, how reasons relate to causes, and how individual agency extends to
I_4_12 — Galileo Project and UAPx: Scientific Detection Programs
The scientific study of UAP has historically been constrained by the absence of systematic, calibrated, multi-sensor observational programs designed specifically to detect, characterize, and analyze anomalous aerial phen
I_4_13 — Space-Based Detection: Satellite and Orbital Monitoring
The most comprehensive sensor network ever built by humanity — the U.S. Space Surveillance Network (SSN), the Defense Support Program (DSP) infrared satellite constellation, its successor the Space-Based Infrared System
J_1_09 — Ancient Automata, Mechanical Devices, and Proto-Robotics
The history of automata — self-operating machines that mimic living beings or perform complex tasks — stretches back thousands of years, demonstrating that mechanical ingenuity is not a modern invention but a recurring f
J_2_20 — Zhang Heng's Seismoscope: Ancient Chinese Earthquake Detection
In 132 CE, during the reign of Emperor Shun of Han, the Chinese polymath Zhang Heng (張衡, 78–139 CE) constructed the world's first known instrument for detecting distant earthquakes — the houfeng didong yi (候風地動儀), litera
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
ZD_5_12 — Edge AI and TinyML: On-Device Machine Learning and Embedded Intelligence
Edge AI is the deployment of artificial intelligence algorithms on devices at the "edge" of the network — smartphones, embedded systems, cameras, sensors, wearables, industrial controllers, autonomous vehicles, and drone
R_2_06 — Isbell Snake Detection Hypothesis
This document examines Isbell Snake Detection Hypothesis, a topic within the Biology Evolution research area. Key areas of investigation include Origin and Author, The Core Thesis, The Expanded Pulvinar. The analysis spa
ZA_3_09 — Dark Matter Particle Candidates and Detection
The evidence that approximately 27% of the universe's total energy density consists of dark matter — matter that interacts gravitationally but does not emit, absorb, or scatter electromagnetic radiation in any detectable
V_4_11 — Coding Theory: Error Detection, Correction, and Information Integrity
Coding theory — the mathematical study of error-detecting and error-correcting codes — ensures the reliable transmission and storage of digital information across noisy communication channels, corrupted storage media, an
L_5_08 — Ancient DNA from Sediments: Cave Dirt Genomics
One of the most revolutionary methodological advances in ancient DNA (aDNA) research has been the recovery of hominin DNA directly from cave sediments — without any bones or teeth. This technique, pioneered by Matthias M
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