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2,375 results for "Ark of the Covenant" — page 11 of 119
E_3_01 — Rise and Fall of Civilizations
Every complex civilization in recorded history has collapsed or been transformed beyond recognition. The Bronze Age collapse (~1177 BCE) destroyed the interconnected civilizations of the eastern Mediterranean within a si
E_2_02 — Toba Supervolcano and the 74,000 BP Genetic Bottleneck
Approximately 74,000 years ago, the Toba supervolcano on the island of Sumatra (modern Indonesia) produced the largest volcanic eruption in the last 2 million years: a VEI-8 (Volcanic Explosivity Index maximum) event tha
E_4_20 — Catastrophism vs. Uniformitarianism: History of the Debate
The catastrophism vs. uniformitarianism debate represents one of the most consequential intellectual controversies in the history of science — fundamentally shaping how geologists, biologists, and historians understand t
ZG_2_04 — Oral-Formulaic Composition — Parry-Lord Theory
The oral-formulaic theory (also called the Parry-Lord theory) is one of the most influential discoveries in 20th-century humanities: the demonstration that great oral epics like Homer's Iliad and Odyssey were not compose
ZG_4_05 — Translation Theory and the Limits of Meaning
Translation — the rendering of meaning from one language into another — is one of humanity's oldest and most consequential intellectual practices, shaping the flow of knowledge, literature, religion, and ideas across civ
ZG_3_15 — Philosophy of Linguistics: Chomsky Debate, Innateness, and Language as Instinct
The philosophy of linguistics investigates the foundational questions that underlie the scientific study of language: What is language? Is it fundamentally a biological organ, a social convention, a cognitive skill, or a
J_1_11 — Antikythera Mechanism and Ancient Computing Devices
The Antikythera Mechanism — recovered in 1901 from a Roman-era shipwreck off the Greek island of Antikythera (dated to c. 70–60 BCE by ceramic and coin evidence; the device itself likely constructed c. 150–100 BCE) — is
Q_1_16 — History of Cosmology: Ancient to Modern
Cosmology — the study of the universe's origin, structure, and fate — is humanity's oldest intellectual pursuit and its most modern science. From the flat-earth mythologies of ancient Mesopotamia through the geocentric c
Q_2_12 — Cosmic Nucleosynthesis and Primordial Helium Abundance
Big Bang nucleosynthesis (BBN) — the formation of the lightest elements during the first ~20 minutes after the Big Bang — stands as one of the most remarkable quantitative successes of modern cosmology. With only one fre
Q_2_07 — Cosmic Distance Ladder: Measuring the Universe
The cosmic distance ladder is a succession of techniques by which astronomers measure distances from nearby stars to the edge of the observable universe — each rung calibrates the next. Trigonometric parallax (reliable t
Q_3_01 — The Fermi Paradox & Drake Equation
Enrico Fermi's 1950 lunch question — "Where is everybody?" — remains one of the deepest unanswered questions in science. The galaxy is ~13.6 billion years old, contains ~100–400 billion stars, and (as we now know from Ke
Q_3_09 — Astrobiology and Origin of Life in Space
Astrobiology — the study of the origin, evolution, distribution, and future of life in the universe — sits at the intersection of biology, chemistry, planetary science, and astronomy. The central question — "Are we alone
INTERDOC_65 — The Constants of Existence: A Cross-Domain Architecture
[KEY FINDING] The universe appears to run on approximately 30 physical constants (CODATA 2022), none of which are derived from theory. Life on Earth obeys approximately 12 biological constants (genetic code, ATP, homochi
INTERDOC_24 — Library Destruction and the Erasure of Knowledge
[KEY FINDING] The Library of Alexandria — founded by Ptolemy I Soter (~295 BCE), estimated to have held 400,000–700,000 scrolls — suffered multiple destruction events: Julius Caesar's fire (48 BCE, which may have burned
INTERDOC_13 — Out of Africa vs. Multiregional: The Synthesis That Changed Everything
The two dominant models of human origins battled from the 1980s through the 2010s. Chris Stringer and Peter Andrews championed the Recent African Origin (RAO) model (1988, Science): anatomically modern humans evolved exc
ZC_3_02 — Sociology of Science and Knowledge
Sociology of knowledge examines how social conditions shape what counts as knowledge. Karl Mannheim (Ideology and Utopia, 1929/1936) argued that thought is "existentially determined" — shaped by the thinker's social posi
ZC_5_02 — Sociology of Technology: Social Shaping, Actor-Networks, and Technological Determinism
The sociology of technology (a core subfield of Science and Technology Studies — STS) investigates how social, economic, political, and cultural factors shape the development, design, adoption, and consequences of techno
ZC_5_17 — Ritual Efficacy Mechanisms: How Ritual Produces Real-World Effects
Ritual — formalized, repetitive, symbolic action that is culturally prescribed and often marked as distinct from ordinary behavior — is a universal feature of human societies, found in religious ceremonies, civic commemo
ZC_1_05 — Psychology of Religion & Spiritual Experience
The psychology of religion — the empirical study of religious and spiritual experience, belief, and behavior — was inaugurated by William James's The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902), which established that relig
ZC_1_15 — Sociology of Emotions
Sociology of emotions examines how emotions are socially shaped, managed, and structured — challenging the assumption that feelings are purely biological or individual. Arlie Russell Hochschild (The Managed Heart, 1983)
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