RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
552 results for "cultural astronomy" — page 12 of 28
T_2_01 — Psychology of Grief, Loss, and Death Awareness
The psychology of grief, loss, and death awareness spans clinical bereavement research, existential psychology, and experimental social cognition. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross's five-stage model (1969), though culturally ubiqui
T_1_08 — Personality Psychology and the Big Five
Personality psychology seeks to understand individual differences in characteristic patterns of thinking, feeling, and behaving — and why these patterns remain relatively stable across time and situations.
T_1_10 — Psychometrics and Intelligence Testing
Intelligence testing is among the oldest and most psychometrically robust enterprises in psychology. Spearman's g factor (1904) — a general mental ability extracted through factor analysis — remains one of the strongest
T_1_11 — History of Psychology
Psychology's formal history as an independent discipline spans approximately 150 years — from Wilhelm Wundt's founding of the first experimental psychology laboratory in Leipzig (1879) to the present day. The discipline
T_3_11 — Color Psychology and Synesthesia
Color psychology examines how color perception influences cognition, emotion, and behavior, while synesthesia is a neurological condition in which stimulation of one sensory modality automatically triggers perception in
D_1_14 — Karahan Tepe — Pre-Pottery Neolithic Ritual Complex
Karahan Tepe is a Pre-Pottery Neolithic (PPN) site in southeastern Turkey (Şanlıurfa Province), approximately 46 km southeast of Göbekli Tepe, dating to c. 9400–8200 BCE. Discovered during surface surveys in 1997 and sys
D_1_02 — Pyramids Worldwide
Pyramidal structures appear on every inhabited continent — Egypt, Mesoamerica, China, Sudan, Indonesia, and beyond. The Great Pyramid of Giza (2560 BCE) remains the most precisely engineered ancient structure known, with
D_5_07 — Handbag / Knowledge Container Motif
One of the most puzzling cross-cultural motifs in ancient art: a "handbag" or bucket-shaped object appears in the hands of divine and semi-divine beings across civilizations separated by thousands of miles and thousands
D_5_27 — Electromagnetic and Acoustic Properties of Sacred Sites
A growing body of measurement work shows that several Neolithic and Bronze Age ceremonial sites — Newgrange (Ireland, ~3200 BCE), the Hypogeum of Ħal Saflieni (Malta, ~3300–3000 BCE), Chavín de Huántar (Peru, ~1200–500 B
D_5_18 — Mandala Sacred Architecture: Cross-Cultural Cosmic Diagrams in Stone
The mandala (Sanskrit: "circle" or "completion") is a geometric diagram — typically featuring concentric circles and squares, radial symmetry, and a defined center — that functions as a map of the cosmos, a meditation ai
D_3_19 — Spiral Geometry in Cross-Cultural Sacred Art and Architecture
The spiral is among the most universal motifs in human visual culture, appearing independently across every inhabited continent from the Paleolithic to the present. From the triple spiral (triskele) at Newgrange (c. 3200
B_2_02 — Anunnaki Connection
The Anunnaki are a group of deities in ancient Sumerian, Akkadian, Assyrian, and Babylonian mythology. Their name means "Princely Offspring" or "Those of Royal Blood." In original texts they are anthropomorphic gods who
B_2_21 — Unicorn: Horse-Horn Mythology and Cultural Persistence
The unicorn — a single-horned equine creature of extraordinary beauty and power — is one of the most enduring mythological figures in world culture, with a documented textual tradition spanning at least 2,400 years and p
B_2_03 — Underground Creatures and Myths
Virtually every ancient civilization across the globe has myths and legends about beings living underground. These stories span continents, cultures, and millennia — often with striking similarities despite no known cont
B_2_01 — Reptilian Beings Overview
Reptilian/serpent beings constitute the single most widespread non-human archetype across human civilizations. Every major culture on Earth independently developed traditions of intelligent serpentine or reptilian entiti
B_1_19 — Love and Beauty Deities: Cross-Cultural Comparative Analysis
Deities governing love, beauty, fertility, and sexuality appear across virtually every documented religious tradition, often combining erotic power with martial or funerary functions that modern Western categories would
B_1_03 — Osiris — Death, Resurrection, and the Underworld Kingdom
Osiris (Egyptian: Wsjr, conventionally vocalized as Wesir/Usir) is one of the most important deities of ancient Egypt — the god who rules the underworld (Duat), judges the dead, and provides the template for resurrection
B_1_20 — Trickster Deities: Cross-Cultural Comparison
The trickster is among the most widespread deity archetypes in world mythology, appearing independently across every inhabited continent. Characterized by cunning, boundary-crossing, shapeshifting, and the subversion of
ZD_5_02 — Digital Preservation and the Longevity of Knowledge
Digital preservation — the set of policies, strategies, and actions required to ensure continued access to digital information over time — addresses one of the great paradoxes of the information age: humanity is producin
L_2_15 — Population Structure of the Ancient Near East: Farming Spread Genetics
The Neolithic Revolution — the independent invention of agriculture in the Fertile Crescent (~10,000-8,000 BCE) — was one of the most consequential transformations in human history, and ancient DNA has revealed that the
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