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2,499 results for "La Niña" — page 16 of 125
A_2_21 — Renaissance Esotericism: Hermeticism Revival, Ficino, and Pico della Mirandola
The Renaissance revival of Hermeticism (c. 1460–1600) began when Cosimo de' Medici commissioned Marsilio Ficino to translate the Corpus Hermeticum from Greek into Latin in 1463 — prioritizing it over Plato's dialogues. F
A_2_07 — 2 Enoch (Slavonic) and 3 Enoch (Hebrew Apocalypse)
2 Enoch (the "Slavonic Apocalypse of Enoch" or "Book of the Secrets of Enoch") and 3 Enoch (the "Hebrew Apocalypse of Enoch" or "Sefer Hekhalot") are two distinct pseudepigraphical texts that extend the Enochic tradition
A_2_14 — Emerald Tablet: Tabula Smaragdina and Alchemical Foundation
The Emerald Tablet (Tabula Smaragdina) is a short cryptic text — ranging from 12 to 15 lines depending on the version — attributed to the legendary Hermes Trismegistus ("Thrice-Great Hermes") that became the foundational
A_4_06 — Quranic Cosmology, Jinn, and Islamic Angelology
The Quran — Islam's primary sacred text (610–632 CE) — presents a rich cosmological framework that includes seven heavens and seven earths, a Throne of God (al-Arsh) upon the cosmic waters, a fully populated invisible re
A_4_10 — I Ching (Yijing) — The Classic of Changes
The I Ching (易經, Yìjīng, "Classic of Changes") is one of the oldest continuously used texts in human history, originating from Shang dynasty oracle bone divination (~1200 BCE) and formalized during the Western Zhou perio
A_4_14 — Shan Hai Jing (Classic of Mountains and Seas)
The Shan Hai Jing (山海經, "Classic of Mountains and Seas") is one of the most extraordinary texts of the ancient Chinese literary corpus — an encyclopedic compendium of mythological geography, zoology, mineralogy, and cosm
A_3_07 — Kalevala and Finnish-Baltic Mythology
The Kalevala is the Finnish national epic, compiled from oral folk poetry (runo songs) by physician-scholar Elias Lönnrot and first published in 1835 (32 poems) with an expanded edition of 50 poems in 1849. Lönnrot trave
U_1_16 — Gamelan: Indonesian Bronze Orchestra Tradition
Gamelan — from the Javanese word gamel ("to hammer") — is the collective term for the bronze percussion orchestra traditions of Java, Bali, and neighboring Indonesian islands, representing one of the world's most acousti
U_1_14 — World Dance Traditions: Ballet, Bharatanatyam, Flamenco, and Hula
Dance — the oldest art form, predating language, visual art, and music in some theoretical models — is the organization of human movement in time and space for expressive, ritual, social, or aesthetic purposes. Every kno
U_3_09 — Metalwork and Blacksmithing Traditions
Metalworking — the shaping of metals by heating, hammering, casting, and alloying — is one of humanity's most transformative technological achievements and a major domain of artistic expression. Origins: native copper wa
U_3_08 — Glassmaking and Stained Glass
Glass — an amorphous solid formed by rapidly cooling molten silica (SiO₂) with fluxes (soda/potash to lower melting temperature) and stabilizers (lime to prevent water solubility) — has been manufactured for ~5,000 years
U_5_20 — Sacred Geography: Landscape, Pilgrimage, and Ritual Space
Sacred geography is the study of how human cultures invest physical landscapes with spiritual, cosmological, and mythological significance — transforming terrain into hierophanic space where the divine intersects the mat
U_2_02 — Cave Art — Lascaux, Chauvet & World's Oldest Paintings
Cave art constitutes the oldest known evidence of symbolic visual expression by Homo sapiens (and possibly Neanderthals), with the earliest confirmed figurative painting — a Sulawesi warty pig — dated to at least 45,500
U_4_13 — Mandala: Sacred Circle Art, Meditation, and Cosmic Diagram
A mandala (Sanskrit: मण्डल, maṇḍala, "circle," "essence," "completion") is a geometric, symmetrical diagram — typically circular or square-within-circle — used in Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, and other Asian religious traditio
U_4_03 — Cultural Evolution — Dual Inheritance and Cumulative Culture
Cultural evolution theory applies Darwinian principles — variation, selection, inheritance — to the transmission and transformation of cultural information (beliefs, technologies, norms, institutions). The dual inheritan
U_4_08 — Garden Design & Sacred Landscapes
Gardens have served throughout human history as constructed intersections of nature, art, religion, and power — from the Persian pairidaeza (walled garden, the etymological root of "paradise") to Japanese Zen rock garden
X_2_01 — Psychosomatic Medicine and Placebo Science
The placebo effect — measurable physiological change resulting from the belief or expectation of treatment rather than the treatment's pharmacological action — is among the most replicated and least understood phenomena
X_2_11 — Ethnobotanical Pharmacology: Plant-Based Medicines Across Cultures
Ethnobotanical pharmacology (or ethnopharmacology) investigates the medicinal use of plants across human cultures — encompassing the traditional knowledge systems that identified, prepared, and administered plant-based m
X_5_18 — Binaural Beats: Auditory Processing, Brainwave Entrainment, and Therapeutic Claims
Binaural beats are an auditory perceptual phenomenon first described by Heinrich Wilhelm Dove in 1839: when two tones of slightly different frequencies are presented separately to each ear (e.g., 400 Hz left, 410 Hz righ
X_5_20 — Medical Regulation: Clinical Trials, Drug Safety, and the History of Oversight
Medical regulation — the system of laws, agencies, and protocols governing drug development, clinical trials, and medical device approval — evolved over centuries from virtually no oversight to the elaborate global frame
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