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3,565 results for "de re publica" — page 17 of 179
B_1_04 — Ningishzida — Serpent Deity, Underworld Guardian, and Knowledge Bearer
Ningishzida (Sumerian: dNin-ĝiš-zid-da, "Lord of the Good Tree" or "Lord of the Faithful Tree") is a Mesopotamian deity associated with serpents, the underworld, vegetation, and secret knowledge. He appears in Sumerian t
B_3_12 — Phoenix and Firebird: Resurrection Bird Across Cultures
The Phoenix — a mythical bird that dies in fire and is reborn from its own ashes — is among the most enduring and widespread symbols of death, regeneration, and immortality in world mythology. The concept appears in dist
ZD_3_01 — Database Theory and Relational Model
Database theory provides the mathematical foundations for organizing, storing, querying, and managing structured data — one of the most practically consequential branches of computer science. Before the relational model,
ZD_5_13 — Digital Forensics: Computer Evidence, Incident Response, and Cyber Investigation
Digital forensics is the application of scientific methods and techniques to the identification, collection, preservation, examination, analysis, and presentation of digital evidence from computers, networks, mobile devi
ZD_5_04 — Computer Graphics: Rendering, Visualization, and Visual Computing
Computer graphics (CG) is the field of computing concerned with generating, manipulating, and displaying visual content using computers — encompassing everything from the mathematical foundations of rendering photorealis
ZD_2_08 — Penrose and Computation: Non-Computability, Consciousness, and Gödel's Theorem
Roger Penrose (b. 1931), Nobel laureate in physics (2020, for demonstrating that black hole formation is a robust prediction of general relativity), has advanced an influential and controversial argument that human mathe
L_4_13 — Ancient DNA: Methods, Revelations, and Ethical Debates
Ancient DNA (aDNA) — genetic material recovered from biological remains thousands to hundreds of thousands of years old — has revolutionized our understanding of human evolution, migration, and population history. The fi
L_4_02 — Mendel, Inheritance, and the Rediscovery of Genetics
Gregor Johann Mendel (1822–1884), an Augustinian friar at the St. Thomas Abbey in Brno (then part of the Austrian Empire), conducted the foundational experiments in genetics by systematically crossing garden pea plants (
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
L_2_18 — Archaic Admixture in Africa (Ghost Populations)
While Neanderthal and Denisovan admixture in non-African populations has been well-documented since Svante Pääbo's landmark 2010 Neanderthal genome paper, evidence for archaic admixture within Africa represents a more re
L_3_13 — Human Accelerated Regions: What Makes Us Genetically Unique
Human Accelerated Regions (HARs) are short segments of the genome that were highly conserved across millions of years of mammalian evolution — indicating strong functional constraint — but then underwent a burst of rapid
Y_4_08 — Sleep Science — REM, NREM, and the Ancient Understanding of Sleep
Sleep science has undergone a revolution in the 21st century, fundamentally altering our understanding of why humans sleep. The landmark 2012 discovery of the glymphatic system by Maiken Nedergaard revealed that the brai
Y_4_09 — Sensory Deprivation — Float Tanks, Dark Retreats, and Consciousness Isolation
Sensory deprivation research — the systematic reduction or elimination of sensory input to study consciousness — began with John C. Lilly's invention of the isolation/flotation tank in 1954 at the National Institute of M
Y_5_18 — Sensory Deprivation & Float Tanks
Sensory deprivation — the systematic reduction or elimination of external sensory input — has been studied scientifically since the 1950s, with two primary paradigms: chamber REST (Restricted Environmental Stimulation Te
Y_2_05 — Near-Death Experiences: Cross-Cultural Analysis
Near-death experiences (NDEs) — profound subjective experiences occurring during clinical death, cardiac arrest, or perceived proximity to death — have been reported across virtually all cultures and historical periods.
Y_2_06 — Dissociation, Depersonalization, and Derealization
Dissociation — the disruption of normally integrated functions of consciousness, memory, identity, emotion, perception, behavior, and sense of self — represents one of the most revealing natural experiments for understan
Y_2_10 — Drowning and Near-Drowning: Aquatic Altered Consciousness
Drowning — defined by the WHO (2002, revised 2005) as "the process of experiencing respiratory impairment from submersion/immersion in liquid" — is one of the leading causes of accidental death worldwide (~236,000 deaths
Y_1_11 — Ketamine: Dissociative Anesthetic and Consciousness Explorer
Ketamine is a dissociative anesthetic — first synthesized by Calvin Stevens in 1962 and introduced into clinical use by Edward Domino and Guenter Corssen (1966) — that has undergone a remarkable transformation from battl
Y_1_15 — Micro-Dosing: Sub-Perceptual Psychedelic Use and Cognitive Effects
Micro-dosing — the practice of regularly consuming sub-perceptual doses (typically 1/10th to 1/20th of a standard recreational dose) of psychedelic substances, most commonly LSD (~10–20 micrograms) or psilocybin (~0.1–0.
H_1_08 — Destruction of Nalanda and Asian Knowledge Centers
The destruction of Nalanda — the world's first residential university, operating continuously for approximately 700 years (5th–12th centuries CE) in what is now Bihar, India — represents one of the most consequential epi
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