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1,269 results for "psychological effects of isolation" — page 12 of 64

H_3_07 Suppression & Thesis

H_3_07 — Suppression of Women's Knowledge and Healing Traditions

Across European and colonial history, women's roles as healers, herbalists, midwives, and knowledge transmitters were systematically marginalized through a combination of religious persecution, medical professionalizatio

Hypatia midwifery herbalism wise women witch trials Ehrenreich
H_3_02 Suppression & Thesis

H_3_02 — Suppression of Gnostic and Heterodox Christianity

From the earliest centuries of Christianity through the medieval period, a sustained campaign of suppression eliminated dozens of alternative Christian movements, destroying their texts and persecuting their adherents. B

Gnosticism Nag Hammadi Marcion Cathars Albigensian Crusade Council of Nicaea
H_4_06 Suppression & Thesis

H_4_06 — Suppression of Psychedelic Research (1960s–2000s)

From the late 1940s through the mid-1960s, psychedelic substances — particularly LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) and psilocybin — were the subject of extensive legitimate scientific research, with over 1,000 peer-review

psychedelics Schedule I LSD psilocybin MDMA Controlled Substances Act
H_4_10 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_4_10 — Corporate Suppression of Science

One of the most systematic and consequential forms of knowledge suppression in the modern era is the deliberate corporate manufacture of scientific doubt to protect profitable but harmful products. The strategy was pione

corporate science suppression tobacco industry doubt leaded gasoline Ethyl Corporation sugar industry
P_3_05 Philosophy & Meaning

P_3_05 — Philosophy of Science — Demarcation, Method, and Progress

The philosophy of science investigates the foundations, methods, and implications of science — asking what distinguishes science from non-science (the demarcation problem), how scientific theories are confirmed or refute

philosophy of science Popper falsificationism Kuhn paradigm shift Lakatos
P_3_14 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_3_14 — Hegel: Dialectics, Phenomenology of Spirit, and Historical Reason

Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831), the most ambitious and systematic philosopher of the German Idealist tradition, developed a comprehensive philosophical system in which reality, thought, and history are underst

Hegel Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel dialectic thesis-antithesis-synthesis Phenomenology of Spirit Geist
P_3_13 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_3_13 — Kant: Transcendental Idealism and the Limits of Reason

Immanuel Kant (1724-1804), professor at the University of Königsberg in East Prussia, produced what is widely regarded as the most transformative body of work in modern Western philosophy. His three Critiques — the Criti

Kant Immanuel Kant transcendental idealism Critique of Pure Reason a priori synthetic a priori
P_3_04 Philosophy & Meaning

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

phenomenology Husserl intentionality epoché transcendental reduction Heidegger
P_4_09 Philosophy & Meaning

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

non-dualism Advaita Vedanta Shankara Brahman Atman maya
P_1_09 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_1_09 — Philosophy of Time

The philosophy of time addresses some of the deepest questions in metaphysics: Is time real or an illusion? Does the present moment have a special ontological status, or are past, present, and future equally real? Does t

philosophy of time McTaggart A-series B-series presentism eternalism
P_1_02 Philosophy & Meaning

P_1_02 — Philosophical Frameworks for the Meaning of Life

"What is the meaning of life?" is perhaps the oldest philosophical question. Across 2,500+ years of systematic philosophy, four major positions have emerged: (1) Objective meaning — life has a purpose built into reality

meaning of life existentialism absurdism nihilism logotherapy Camus
P_1_10 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_1_10 — Philosophy of Technology

Philosophy of technology examines the nature, meaning, and ethical implications of technology — not merely as a collection of tools but as a fundamental mode of human existence that shapes perception, values, social rela

philosophy of technology Heidegger Question Concerning Technology Ellul technological society Borgmann
P_1_05 Philosophy & Meaning

P_1_05 — Gödel's Incompleteness and Limits of Knowledge

In 1931, Kurt Gödel proved two theorems that shattered the foundations of mathematics and permanently altered humanity's understanding of knowledge, truth, and proof. The FIRST INCOMPLETENESS THEOREM states: in any consi

Gödel incompleteness theorem undecidable unprovable consistency
P_1_08 Philosophy & Meaning

P_1_08 — Philosophy of Mind and the Body Problem

The mind-body problem — how do mental states (thoughts, feelings, consciousness) relate to physical states (neurons, brains, bodies)? — is one of the oldest and most intractable problems in philosophy. Descartes (1641) f

philosophy of mind mind-body problem dualism Descartes physicalism materialism
P_5_05 Philosophy & Meaning

P_5_05 — Philosophy of Language

The philosophy of language asks: How do words and sentences get their meaning? How does language connect to reality? Can thought exist without language? Is meaning determined by the speaker's intention, by social convent

philosophy of language meaning reference sense Frege Russell
P_5_08 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_5_08 — Philosophy of History

Philosophy of history asks whether history has a pattern, direction, or meaning — and how historical knowledge itself is possible. Two broad orientations have competed since antiquity: cyclical views (civilizations rise

philosophy of history historicism metahistory Hegel dialectic world spirit
P_5_06 Philosophy & Meaning

P_5_06 — Philosophy of Mathematics

The philosophy of mathematics investigates the nature of mathematical objects, the status of mathematical truth, and the relationship between mathematics and the physical world. The fundamental question is: Are mathemati

philosophy of mathematics mathematical realism Platonism mathematics nominalism formalism logicism
P_5_18 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_5_18 — Comparative Religion & the Science of Sacred Traditions

Comparative religion — the systematic study of the world's religious traditions through cross-cultural analysis — emerged as an academic discipline in the 19th century with Friedrich Max Müller's translation of the Sacre

comparative religion history of religions Mircea Eliade Joseph Campbell phenomenology of religion sacred and profane
P_5_02 Philosophy & Meaning

P_5_02 — Computational Phylogenetics of Mythology

This document examines Computational Phylogenetics of Mythology, a topic within the Philosophy Meaning research area. Key areas of investigation include The Traditional Approach: Comparative Mythology, The Biological Ana

phylogenetics mythology Yuri Berezkin Julien d'Huy Michael Witzel Laurasian
P_5_03 Philosophy & Meaning

P_5_03 — Aesthetics — Philosophy of Beauty, Art, and the Sublime

Aesthetics — the philosophical study of beauty, art, taste, and the sublime — has been a central philosophical concern from Plato's suspicion of art as dangerous imitation to contemporary debates about the nature of aest

aesthetics philosophy of art beauty sublime Plato mimesis