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23 results for "warfare" — page 1 of 2
J_4_11 — Ancient Siege Technology: Engineering Warfare
Siege warfare — the art and engineering of attacking and defending fortified positions — drove some of the most sophisticated technological development in the ancient world. From the Assyrian Empire (which pioneered syst
ZC_3_11 — Warfare and Conflict — Anthropological Perspectives
The anthropology of warfare and conflict addresses one of the most consequential and contested questions in the human sciences: is organized violence a universal feature of human societies, an evolutionary inheritance, o
T_4_11 — Propaganda and Persuasion: Techniques, Psychology, and Modern Information Warfare
Propaganda — the systematic dissemination of information (true, distorted, or fabricated) to shape public attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors in service of a particular agenda — and persuasion — the art and science of chan
ZD_5_15 — Information & Hybrid Warfare
Information warfare and hybrid warfare describe the integration of military and non-military tools — cyberattacks, disinformation campaigns, economic coercion, proxy forces, diplomatic pressure, and conventional military
H_4_25 — Information Warfare and Historical Revisionism: Modern Threats
Information warfare — the strategic use of information (and misinformation) to achieve political, military, or economic objectives — has entered a new and qualitatively different phase in the digital era. While propagand
S_4_11 — Cyber Warfare and Digital Conflict
Cyber warfare encompasses state-sponsored or state-directed operations in cyberspace intended to disrupt, damage, or destroy adversary information systems, critical infrastructure, or military capabilities. Landmark oper
J_4_04 — Ancient Warfare Technology — Siege, Naval, and Chemical Warfare
Ancient warfare technology reveals engineering sophistication that challenges linear narratives of military progress. Greek fire — the Byzantine Empire's supreme naval weapon — remains one of history's most enduring tech
ZC_2_01 — Propaganda, Persuasion, and Information Warfare
Propaganda and persuasion studies span rhetoric, psychology, political science, and media studies. From Edward Bernays's Freudian public relations (1928) and Walter Lippmann's manufactured consent (1922), through Goebbel
H_4_32 — Information Warfare, Propaganda & Manufactured Consent
Information warfare — the deliberate use of information and communication systems to gain strategic advantage — is as old as organized conflict, but the modern era has industrialized it. From Edward Bernays's founding of
S_4_07 — Autonomous Weapons Systems — AI, Lethal Autonomy, and the Future of Warfare
Autonomous weapons systems (AWS) represent one of the most consequential intersections of artificial intelligence and military technology. The trajectory from early automated defensive systems (Phalanx CIWS, 1980) throug
E_5_04 — Maya Classic Period Collapse
The Maya Classic Period Collapse (c. 800–1000 CE) was the dramatic and largely irreversible abandonment of dozens of major lowland Maya city-states across the southern Maya lowlands (modern-day Guatemala, Belize, western
J_4_06 — Greek Fire and Ancient Incendiary Weapons
Greek fire (hygron pyr, "liquid fire"; also pyr thalassion, "sea fire") was the most devastating and secretive weapon of the medieval world — a petroleum-based incendiary deployed by the Byzantine Empire from 672 CE that
ZD_5_16 — Autonomous Weapons Systems
Autonomous weapons systems (AWS) — also termed lethal autonomous weapons systems (LAWS) — are weapon systems that can select and engage targets without meaningful human control. The debate over these weapons has become o
A_4_01 — The Mahabharata: India's Epic of Cosmic War
The Mahabharata is the longest epic poem ever composed — at ~100,000 verses (1.8 million words), it is roughly 10 times the combined length of the Iliad and the Odyssey. Attributed to the sage Vyasa ("the compiler"), it
W_1_30 — Alexander the Great: Conquest, Hellenization, and Cultural Fusion
Alexander III of Macedon (356–323 BCE), known as Alexander the Great, created the largest empire the ancient world had seen in just 13 years of campaigning — conquering from Greece to Egypt to the Indus Valley, covering
ZF_5_02 — Sonar and Acoustic Ocean Sensing: Technology and Discovery
Sonar (SOund NAvigation and Ranging) is the primary technology for sensing the underwater environment — an acoustic analog to radar that exploits the fact that sound travels efficiently through water while electromagneti
E_2_06 — Black Death, Pandemic Cycles, and Civilizational Reset
The Black Death (1347–1353 CE) was the most devastating pandemic in recorded human history. Caused by the bacterium *Yersinia pestis and transmitted primarily through flea bites from infected rats, the plague killed an e
INTERDOC_33 — Technology, Warfare, and the Ethical Thread
The relationship between technology and warfare is not merely that technology enables new weapons — it is that warfare drives technological development more consistently than any other human activity. The bronze sword (~
F_3_03 — Domestication of the Horse and the Wheel: Technologies That Reshaped Civilization
The domestication of the horse and the invention of the wheel were among the most transformative technological developments in human history, fundamentally altering transportation, warfare, trade, and social organization
R_5_10 — Plant Defense: Chemical Warfare, Thorns, and Allelopathy
Plants, being sessile organisms unable to flee from herbivores, have evolved an extraordinary arsenal of defenses — mechanical, chemical, and ecological — that collectively represent one of evolution's most creative solu
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