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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
386 results for "predicate logic" — page 10 of 20
O_2_08 — Weathering, Erosion, and Deep Time Landscape Evolution
Weathering (the in-situ breakdown of rock and minerals) and erosion (the transport of weathered material by water, wind, ice, and gravity) are the fundamental surface processes that, operating over deep time (millions to
O_4_13 — Rainbow Mountains: Zhangye Danxia and Chromatic Geology
The world's "Rainbow Mountains" — strikingly multicolored geological formations displaying vivid bands of red, orange, yellow, green, blue-gray, and white rock — represent some of Earth's most visually spectacular natura
O_3_02 — Sacred Water: Wells, Springs, and Purification Rites
Water occupies a unique position in human religious experience — simultaneously the substance of creation (primordial waters from which the cosmos emerged), the medium of purification (baptism, mikveh, wuḍūʾ), the portal
T_2_08 — Neuropsychology and Brain Damage
Neuropsychology studies the relationship between brain structure/function and behavior — using patterns of cognitive impairment following brain damage to infer how the intact brain organizes mental processes.
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
T_2_12 — Psychology of Trauma and PTSD
Psychological trauma — exposure to events involving actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence — can produce lasting alterations in cognition, emotion, arousal, and behavior. Post-Traumatic Stress Dis
T_1_14 — Self-Determination Theory: Autonomy, Competence, Relatedness, and Intrinsic Motivation
Self-Determination Theory (SDT) — developed by Edward Deci and Richard Ryan (University of Rochester, 1985–present) — is one of the most influential and empirically supported theories of human motivation, proposing that
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
D_2_20 — Central Asian Archaeological Sites: Merv, Afrasiab, and Ai-Khanoum
Central Asia — the vast region spanning modern Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and northern Afghanistan — was one of the most intensely urbanized and culturally productive regions of the ancient world, despite its
D_2_21 — Black Sea Deluge: Archaeological Evidence for Rapid Flooding
The Black Sea Deluge Hypothesis proposes that the Black Sea — now a large saline body connected to the Mediterranean via the Bosporus Strait — was once a significantly smaller, lower freshwater lake during the Last Glaci
D_3_02 — Paracas Trident, Candelabra, and Cross-Cultural Trident Symbolism
The Paracas Candelabra (also called "Candelabro de Paracas" or "the Trident") is a massive geoglyph carved into the sandy hillside of the Paracas Peninsula on Peru's southern coast, overlooking Pisco Bay. Measuring ~180
B_5_08 — New Animism: Relational Ontology and Perspectivism
"New animism" refers to a scholarly reinterpretation of animism — the attribution of life, intentionality, personhood, or agency to non-human entities (animals, plants, stones, rivers, weather phenomena, artifacts) — tha
B_2_12 — Doppelgängers, Spirit Doubles, and the Ka
The experience of encountering one's own double — or a spectral duplicate of another person — is one of the most unsettling and widely reported phenomena in human experience. Ancient Egyptian religion formalized the conc
ZD_1_18 — Quantum Error Correction
Quantum error correction (QEC) protects quantum information against decoherence and operational error by encoding a single logical qubit redundantly across many physical qubits, then detecting errors via syndrome measure
ZD_3_16 — DNA Computing and Molecular Computation
DNA computing — the use of DNA molecules and biochemical reactions to perform computation — was inaugurated by Leonard Adleman (University of Southern California), who in 1994 demonstrated the first molecular-scale compu
ZD_3_17 — Reversible Computing and Landauer's Principle
Landauer's principle (1961) — one of the deepest connections between physics and computation — states that the erasure of one bit of information necessarily dissipates at least $k_B T \ln 2$ of energy as heat (approximat
ZD_5_17 — Quantum Computing: Qubits, Gates & Quantum Information Processing
Quantum computing harnesses quantum mechanical phenomena — superposition, entanglement, and interference — to perform computations fundamentally impossible for classical machines. First proposed by Richard Feynman in 198
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
ZD_4_12 — Quantum Computing — Architecture, Algorithms, and Implications
Quantum computing — computation that exploits the principles of quantum mechanics (superposition, entanglement, and interference) to process information in ways fundamentally different from classical computers — represen
ZD_4_15 — DNA Computing & Molecular Computation
DNA computing and molecular computation use biological molecules — primarily DNA and RNA — as substrates for information processing, storage, and logic operations. Pioneered by Leonard Adleman's 1994 demonstration of sol
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