RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
2,471 results for "Truth and Reconciliation Commission" — page 104 of 124
P_3_04 — Phenomenology — Consciousness and the Structure of Experience
Phenomenology, founded by Edmund Husserl at the turn of the 20th century, is the systematic study of the structures of consciousness and the phenomena that appear within it. Through its central methodological innovations
P_3_06 — Plato — Forms, Cosmology, and the Philosophical Tradition
Plato (428/427–348/347 BCE) is the foundational figure of Western philosophy, whose dialogues established the frameworks for metaphysics (Theory of Forms), epistemology (knowledge as recollection), political philosophy (
P_3_09 — Nihilism, Absurdism, and Camus
Nihilism — from Latin nihil ("nothing") — is the philosophical position that life, existence, and values lack objective meaning, purpose, or intrinsic worth. It is not a single doctrine but a cluster of related positions
P_3_03 — Existentialism — Freedom, Anxiety, and Authentic Being
Existentialism is the philosophical movement that places individual existence, freedom, and choice at the center of philosophical inquiry. Originating with Kierkegaard's rebellion against Hegelian system-building and Nie
P_4_17 — African Philosophy & Ubuntu: Communal Personhood and Relational Ethics
Ubuntu — often rendered as "I am because we are" (umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu in Zulu/Xhosa: "a person is a person through other persons") — represents the most widely discussed concept in contemporary African philosophy, e
P_4_18 — African Philosophy: Ubuntu, Sage Tradition, and Ethnophilosophy
African philosophy encompasses a diverse set of intellectual traditions — from pre-colonial oral philosophical systems preserved through proverbs, cosmologies, and sage discourse, through the anti-colonial movements of N
P_4_03 — Language, Naming, and the Creative Word
Across unrelated civilizations, language — specifically the spoken word — is understood as a creative force, not merely a communication tool. The Egyptian god Ptah creates the world through speech; the Hebrew God speaks
P_4_07 — Confucian Ethics, Filial Piety, and Social Harmony
Confucianism — the ethical, social, and political philosophy developed from the teachings of Kong Qiu (Confucius, 551-479 BCE) — has shaped East Asian civilization more profoundly than perhaps any other single intellectu
P_4_01 — Death and the Afterlife Across Cultures
Every known human culture has developed beliefs about what happens after death — making afterlife cosmology one of the most universal features of human thought. The major frameworks include: judgment and reward/punishmen
P_4_04 — Art as Knowledge Encoding — Visual, Musical, and Performative Epistemologies
Before writing systems emerged (~3200 BCE), and for most of human history since, art — visual, musical, performative, and material — served as a primary means of encoding, storing, and transmitting knowledge across gener
P_4_02 — Perennial Philosophy and Universal Wisdom
The Perennial Philosophy — philosophia perennis — is the thesis that beneath the surface diversity of the world's religious and spiritual traditions lies a SINGLE, universal truth about the nature of reality and human ex
P_4_10 — Islamic Philosophy — Al-Kindi to Ibn Rushd and Beyond
Islamic philosophy (falsafa) represents one of the great intellectual traditions in human history, flourishing from the 9th through 12th centuries CE and continuing through later thinkers like Mulla Sadra into the modern
P_4_09 — Non-Dualism — Advaita Vedanta, Taoism, and the Unity of Opposites
Non-dualism — the philosophical position that ultimate reality is not divided into fundamentally opposed categories (subject/object, mind/matter, self/other, good/evil) — appears independently across the world's deepest
P_1_03 — Panpsychism and Modern Philosophy of Mind
Panpsychism — the view that consciousness or experience is a fundamental and ubiquitous feature of reality — has undergone a dramatic revival in academic philosophy over the past two decades. Once dismissed as primitive
P_1_17 — Artificial Intelligence and the Consciousness Question
The question of whether artificial systems can possess consciousness — genuine subjective experience, phenomenal awareness, or "something it is like" to be that system (Thomas Nagel, 1974) — has moved from philosophical
P_1_16 — AI Consciousness Philosophy: Can Machines Think, Feel, and Be Aware?
The question of whether artificial intelligence systems can be conscious — whether machines can genuinely think, have subjective experiences, or possess phenomenal awareness — is one of the deepest unsolved problems at t
P_1_15 — Philosophy of Information: Floridi, Digital Ethics, and the Infosphere
The philosophy of information (PI) is a relatively young branch of philosophy that investigates the conceptual nature and basic principles of information, including its dynamics (computation, information flow), its utili
P_1_14 — Philosophy of Space: Absolute vs. Relational, and the Architecture of Being
The philosophy of space addresses one of the oldest questions in metaphysics: what is space? Is it a real, independently existing entity (an infinite container within which objects are located), or is it nothing more tha
P_1_06 — Personal Identity and Continuity
Personal identity — the question of what makes you you over time, and under what conditions you would cease to exist — is one of philosophy's most ancient and practically urgent problems. The core puzzle is persistence:
P_1_11 — The Demiurge: Creator God in Philosophy and Religion
The Demiurge (from Greek dēmiourgos, "craftsman" or "artisan") is a concept of a divine creator figure responsible for fashioning the physical universe, most famously developed in Plato's dialogue Timaeus (~360 BCE) and
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