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464 results for "kin selection" — page 13 of 24
INTERDOC_20 — Psychedelic Neuroscience and Ancient Ritual Practice
[KEY FINDING] The Johns Hopkins Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research, the Imperial College Centre for Psychedelic Research (est. 2019, directed by Robin Carhart-Harris), and the MAPS (Multidisciplinary Assoc
INTERDOC_40 — Shapeshifting as Universal Constant: Therianthropy Across Time
[KEY FINDING] The Lion-Man (Löwenmensch) — a 31.1 cm mammoth ivory figurine excavated from Hohlenstein-Stadel cave, Swabian Jura, Germany — was carved approximately 40,000 years ago. It is the oldest known representation
INTERDOC_36 — Amphibious Teacher Beings and the USO Connection
[KEY FINDING] The Apkallu (Akkadian) / Abgal (Sumerian) — the "Seven Sages" — are described in Mesopotamian texts as beings sent by the god Enki/Ea to teach humanity the arts of civilization. Berossus (Babylonian priest,
ZB_1_07 — Echolocation: Biological Sonar in Bats, Dolphins, and Beyond
Echolocation — the ability to perceive the environment by emitting sounds and analyzing returning echoes — has evolved independently in bats, toothed whales (dolphins, porpoises, sperm whales), some birds (oilbirds, swif
ZB_5_25 — Animal Migration: Navigation, Endurance, and Ecological Connectivity
Animal migration — the seasonal, round-trip movement of populations between distinct habitats — represents some of the most extraordinary feats of endurance, navigation, and sensory capability in biology. Arctic terns (S
ZB_4_15 — Urban Wildlife Genomics: Rapid Evolution in the Anthropocene City
Cities — covering only ~3% of Earth's land surface but housing >55% of humanity — are emerging as powerful natural laboratories for studying rapid evolution in real time. Urban wildlife genomics investigates how the extr
ZB_4_03 — Desert Biology and Xerophytes
Deserts — regions receiving <250 mm of annual precipitation — cover ~33% of Earth's land surface and harbor organisms with some of the most remarkable adaptations in biology. Desert organisms face extreme challenges: wat
ZC_5_20 — Post-Truth & Misinformation
"Post-truth" — named Oxford Dictionaries' Word of the Year in 2016 and defined as "relating to circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal be
ZC_1_12 — Industrial-Organizational Psychology
Industrial-organizational (I/O) psychology applies psychological principles to workplace behavior — encompassing personnel selection, performance evaluation, motivation, leadership, organizational culture, team dynamics,
ZC_4_10 — Mesoamerican Social Organization: City-States, Lineages, and Cosmological Order
Mesoamerican social organization — spanning the Classic Maya (~250–900 CE), Aztec/Mexica (~1325–1521 CE), Zapotec, Mixtec, and other civilizations across central Mexico through Honduras — represents one of humanity's mos
ZC_4_22 — Urban Anthropology & City as Culture
Urban anthropology — the ethnographic study of life in cities — has grown from a marginal subfield to one of the most vital areas in contemporary social science as humanity has become a predominantly urban species: since
ZC_4_03 — Ethnomusicology — Music as Social Phenomenon
Ethnomusicology — the study of music in its cultural context, or more precisely, the study of music as culture and culture as expressed through music — emerged in the mid-20th century from the older discipline of "compar
ZC_2_04 — Sociology of Education
The sociology of education examines how educational institutions produce, reproduce, and sometimes challenge social inequalities — investigating the relationship between schooling, social class, race, gender, and economi
ZC_2_14 — Sociology of the Family
Sociology of the family examines how families are structured, how they function as social institutions, and how they have transformed historically. Talcott Parsons (1955) theorized the mid-20th-century American nuclear f
G_4_07 — Memetics — Cultural Evolution as Darwinian Process
Memetics proposes that cultural information — ideas, behaviors, styles, skills — evolves through a Darwinian process analogous to biological evolution, with the "meme" as the cultural replicator paralleling the gene. Coi
G_4_14 — Replication Crisis and What It Means for Ancient Claims
The replication crisis refers to the discovery, beginning in the early 2010s, that a substantial proportion of findings published in peer-reviewed scientific journals — particularly in psychology, social science, and bio
G_3_02 — Simulation Theory
Simulation Theory proposes that our perceived reality is a computational simulation running on substrate beyond our direct observation. Bostrom's trilemma (2003) provides the logical scaffolding (Tier 1), quantization of
G_3_05 — Self-Organization and Emergence
Self-organization is the process by which global order arises from local interactions among components of an initially disordered system, without external direction or centralized control. Emergence is the closely relate
G_3_26 — Resonance as Universal Information Encoding
Resonance — the selective amplification of energy at characteristic frequencies — appears across physical, biological, and cognitive systems as a substrate-independent information-encoding mechanism. From radio receivers
G_3_10 — David Bohm's Implicate Order and Holographic Universe
David Bohm (1917–1992) was one of the most original and philosophically minded physicists of the 20th century, contributing both rigorous quantum mechanics and sweeping metaphysical visions. His pilot wave theory (1952)
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