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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
728 results for "precessional age" — page 14 of 37
U_1_22 — Music Therapy Neuroscience
Music therapy neuroscience investigates the neural mechanisms by which music influences brain function, emotion, movement, and cognition — and applies these findings to treat neurological, psychiatric, and developmental
U_1_09 — Sound Art and Experimental Music
Sound art — art that uses sound as its primary medium, often in spatial installations or environmental contexts — and experimental music — music that challenges conventional assumptions about composition, performance, in
U_3_02 — Untitled
Textile arts represent one of humanity's oldest and most informationally dense technologies — encoding cultural knowledge, social identity, mathematical systems, trade networks, and historical narratives within fiber, pa
U_3_18 — Ancient Metallurgy and Material Innovation
Ancient metallurgy — the extraction, alloying, and shaping of metals from raw ores — was among the most transformative technological achievements of human civilization, enabling new tools, weapons, agricultural implement
U_3_06 — Woodworking and Carpentry Traditions
Woodworking — the shaping of wood for functional and aesthetic purposes — is among the oldest human technologies, predating metalworking by millennia. Archaeological evidence: the Schöningen spears (Germany, ~300,000 yea
U_5_21 — Upper Paleolithic Art: Cave Painting, Portable Art, and Symbolic Cognition
Upper Paleolithic art — spanning approximately 45,000 to 10,000 years ago — represents the earliest unambiguous evidence of complex symbolic cognition in Homo sapiens. The corpus includes parietal (cave wall) art at over
U_5_16 — AI-Generated Art: Creativity, Authorship & the Machine
AI-generated art — images, music, text, and video produced through machine learning systems — has become the defining creative controversy of the 2020s. Beginning with DeepDream (2015) and neural style transfer, accelera
U_5_15 — Public Monuments and Memorials: Memory, Power, and Iconoclasm
Public monuments and memorials are among the most politically charged forms of art — objects placed in shared civic space to shape collective memory, assert values, and project power. From the ancient world's triumphal a
U_5_28 — Hierophany: Sacred Manifestation in Architecture, Landscape, and Ritual
Hierophany — a term coined by Mircea Eliade in The Sacred and the Profane (1957) — denotes any manifestation of the sacred in ordinary reality: a stone, a tree, a building, a moment of light. Unlike theophany (appearance
U_5_29 — Ancient Brewing: Beer, Civilization, and Sacred Fermentation
Beer may be older than bread. Archaeological evidence from Raqefet Cave (Israel, c. 13,000 BCE) and Göbekli Tepe (Turkey, c. 10,000 BCE) demonstrates that cereal fermentation predated or co-evolved with agriculture, supp
U_2_14 — Minimalism in Art: Reduction, Silence, and Essential Form
Minimalism — emerging in the early 1960s in New York as a radical reaction against the emotional excess of Abstract Expressionism — reduced art to its most fundamental elements: simple geometric forms, industrial materia
U_2_06 — Cinema and Film History
Cinema — the art and technology of moving images — emerged from late 19th-century developments in photography and persistence of vision. Pioneer technologies: Eadweard Muybridge's sequential photographs of a galloping ho
U_2_13 — Surrealism: Dream Art, Automatism, and the Unconscious Mind
Surrealism — the most influential avant-garde art movement of the 20th century — sought to revolutionize human experience by resolving the contradiction between dream and reality into a higher "surreality." Founded by An
U_2_05 — Photography and Visual Culture
Photography — from Greek phōs (light) + graphē (drawing) — transforms light into permanent images. Origins: the camera obscura (darkened chamber projecting inverted images through a pinhole) was known to Aristotle and us
U_4_04 — Masks & Performance Traditions Worldwide
Masks are among the most universal cultural artifacts in human history, appearing independently on every inhabited continent and serving functions spanning religious ritual, ancestor communication, healing, social contro
U_4_17 — Alchemical Art & Symbolism
Alchemical art represents one of the most visually complex and symbolically layered artistic traditions in Western history — a corpus of illuminated manuscripts, printed emblem books, and hieroglyphic images produced pri
U_4_15 — Ritual Objects and Votive Offerings: Material Culture of Devotion
Ritual objects — material things created, consecrated, or used in religious or ceremonial practice — and votive offerings — objects dedicated to a deity, saint, or supernatural power in fulfillment of a vow, in supplicat
U_4_12 — Iconography and Religious Art
Iconography — the study and production of religious and symbolic imagery — and religious art broadly represent perhaps the single largest category of artistic production in human history. Theoretical framework: Erwin Pan
X_5_15 — Paleopathology: Disease in Antiquity
Paleopathology — the study of disease in ancient human and animal remains — provides direct evidence of health, nutrition, and disease in past populations, bridging archaeology and medicine. Marc Armand Ruffer (Cairo Sch
X_1_13 — Indigenous Bone-Setting and Manual Therapy
Bone-setting and manual therapy — the physical manipulation of bones, joints, and soft tissues to treat musculoskeletal injuries and conditions — have been practiced in virtually every known culture throughout human hist
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