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36 results for "self-similar growth" — page 1 of 2
TH_03 — The Fibonacci Inevitability Principle
ZC_3_21 — Degrowth Economics
Degrowth (décroissance in French) is an intellectual and political movement that challenges the foundational assumption of modern economics: that economic growth — measured by GDP — is inherently desirable, sustainable,
N_4_16 — Club of Rome & Limits to Growth
The Club of Rome is an international think tank founded on April 8, 1968, in Rome, by Aurelio Peccei (1908–1984), an Italian industrialist (former managing director of Fiat and co-founder of Olivetti), and Alexander King
Q_1_20 — Fractal Cosmology: Is the Universe Self-Similar Across Scales?
The observable universe organises matter into a staggering fractal-like web of galaxy filaments, walls, voids, and clusters — structures visible at scales from 1 Mpc (galaxy groups) to 600 Mpc (the Hercules-Corona Boreal
ZB_3_22 — Old-Growth Forests & Ancient Woodland Ecology
Old-growth forests — variously defined as primary forests that have developed over centuries without major anthropogenic disturbance — represent the most structurally complex and biologically diverse terrestrial ecosyste
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
R_4_11 — Regeneration: Axolotl, Planaria, Hydra, and Limb Regrowth
Regeneration — the ability of an organism to regrow lost or damaged body parts — ranges from the routine (skin healing, liver regrowth in humans) to the spectacular: the axolotl (Mexican salamander) can regrow entire lim
V_3_08 — Fractal Geometry: Self-Similarity Across Scales
Fractal geometry, developed primarily by Benoit Mandelbrot (1975-1982), studies shapes with self-similar structure at multiple scales — coastlines, fern leaves, blood vessel networks, galaxy distributions, and financial
U_5_18 — Fractals in Art, Music & Mathematical Aesthetics
Fractal geometry is deeply woven into the fabric of human aesthetic experience across cultures and millennia — not as ornament, but as structure. Richard Taylor (University of Oregon) discovered in 1999 that Jackson Poll
X_5_06 — Pediatrics: The Medicine of Childhood
Pediatrics is the branch of medicine devoted to the health and medical care of infants, children, and adolescents (from birth through age 18–21). The specialty arose from the recognition that children are not simply "sma
X_4_21 — Wound Healing & Human Regeneration Potential
Wound healing and regeneration represent one of biology's most tantalizing puzzles: why can a salamander regrow an entire limb, a zebrafish regenerate its heart, and a planarian reconstruct its entire body from a small f
X_4_18 — Fractal Physiology: The Mathematics of Healthy Life
The body is a fractal machine. From capillaries that branch like river deltas to the 70 m² of lung surface packed into a 4-litre chest cavity, and from the beat-to-beat complexity of a healthy heart to the trabecular sca
X_3_17 — Wound Healing: Coagulation, Tissue Repair, and Chronic Wounds
Wound healing is a highly coordinated biological process involving four overlapping phases: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. The coagulation cascade — a proteolytic chain reaction of clotting fact
ZF_4_10 — Coral as Climate Archive — Paleoceanographic Proxies
Coral paleoclimatology uses the geochemical and physical properties of coral skeletons as high-resolution archives of past ocean conditions — providing some of the most detailed tropical climate records available for the
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
Z_4_10 — Signal Transduction: How Cells Communicate
Signal transduction — the molecular mechanisms by which cells detect, interpret, and respond to external signals (hormones, growth factors, neurotransmitters, cytokines, environmental cues) — is one of the central organi
J_4_01 — Trepanation and Ancient Neurosurgery
This document examines Trepanation and Ancient Neurosurgery, a topic within the Ancient Technology research area. Key areas of investigation include Definition and Terminology, Antiquity and Scope, The Peruvian Concentra
Q_3_08 — Planetary Formation and Protoplanetary Disks
Planets form within protoplanetary disks — rotationally supported structures of gas and dust orbiting newly formed stars, with typical masses of 0.1–10% of the stellar mass, radii of 10–1000 AU, and lifetimes of ~1–10 mi
ZB_2_10 — Endocrine System: Hormones, Chemical Signaling, and Evolution
The endocrine system coordinates organismal development, metabolism, reproduction, and stress responses through chemical messengers — hormones — secreted into the bloodstream. This ancient signaling system predates the n
ZB_5_22 — Deforestation, Land Use Change & Forest Ecology
Deforestation — the permanent conversion of forested land to non-forest uses — has transformed Earth's landscapes since the Neolithic agricultural revolution and accelerated dramatically since 1950. Between 2001 and 2020
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