RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
516 results for "Greenland ice core" — page 18 of 26
ZE_3_11 — Food Ethics — Agriculture, Animal Use, and Sacred Dietary Laws
Food ethics examines the moral dimensions of what we eat and how we produce it — spanning agricultural systems, animal use, sacred dietary laws, environmental impact, and distributive justice. Industrial animal agricultu
ZE_3_13 — Ocean Ethics — Maritime Law, Marine Rights, Ocean Governance
Ocean ethics examines the moral and legal governance of the world's largest ecosystem — the ocean covers 71% of Earth's surface, contains 97% of the planet's water, and produces 50% of the oxygen we breathe, yet remains
ZE_3_01 — Environmental Ethics and Deep Ecology
Environmental ethics examines the moral relationship between humans and the natural environment — Do non-human entities have intrinsic value? Do we have moral obligations to ecosystems, species, and future generations? T
ZE_1_07 — Social Contract Theory
Social contract theory holds that political authority and moral/political obligations are grounded in an agreement — actual or hypothetical — among individuals to form a society and accept governance. The theory addresse
ZE_1_17 — Epistemic Ethics and Intellectual Virtue
Epistemic ethics — the study of moral and ethical dimensions of knowledge, belief, and inquiry — examines our obligations as knowers: when we are responsible for what we believe, how we treat others as sources and recipi
ZE_1_04 — Virtue Ethics — Aristotle to MacIntyre
Virtue ethics is the ethical tradition that focuses not on rules for action (deontology — ZE_1_06) or on consequences (utilitarianism — ZE_1_05) but on character: What kind of person should I be? What human excellences (
ZE_1_08 — Existentialist Ethics
Existentialist ethics grounds morality not in external systems (divine commands, rational duties, utilitarian calculus) but in the radical freedom and responsibility of the individual. Originating with Søren Kierkegaard
ZE_1_01 — Ethics Across Civilizations: Universal Moral Patterns
Despite vast cultural differences, virtually every civilization in human history has independently developed strikingly similar core moral principles: reciprocity (the Golden Rule), prohibitions against murder and theft,
ZE_2_04 — Taboo, the Sacred, and Boundary Transgression
Taboo — the prohibition of certain acts, objects, or persons as dangerous, polluting, or sacred — is one of the most universal features of human culture, yet one of the most difficult to explain. From the Polynesian orig
N_1_07 — Ancient Egyptian Priesthoods and Temple Networks
The Egyptian priesthood constituted one of the most powerful, long-lasting, and institutionally complex religious establishments in human history, operating continuously for over 3,000 years (c. 3100 BCE – 4th century CE
N_1_04 — Eleusinian Mysteries Deep Dive — Ritual Structure, Kykeon, and Legacy
The Eleusinian Mysteries were the most prestigious and longest-running initiatory rites in the ancient Greek and Roman world, practiced continuously for approximately 2,000 years (from ~1500 BCE to 392 CE) at the sanctua
N_5_10 — Intelligence Agencies and Occult Interest: Documented Cases
The intersection of intelligence agencies and occult or paranormal phenomena is one of the most extensively documented — yet still controversial — chapters in 20th-century intelligence history. Declassified documents (pr
R_4_10 — Cetacean Evolution: Whales, Dolphins, and the Return to the Sea
The evolution of cetaceans — whales, dolphins, and porpoises — from small, four-legged terrestrial mammals to the largest animals ever to live on Earth is one of the best-documented major evolutionary transitions, suppor
R_4_12 — Mimicry: Batesian, Müllerian, and Aggressive Deception
Mimicry — the resemblance of one organism (the mimic) to another (the model) or to an environmental feature, evolved to deceive a third party (the signal receiver, typically a predator) — is one of the most elegant demon
R_3_12 — Evolution of Sex and Reproduction
Sex — the rearrangement of genetic material from two parents to produce genetically unique offspring — is one of the most fundamental yet puzzling features of life. Sexual reproduction involves enormous costs: the "twofo
R_5_03 — Domestication of Plants and Agriculture
The domestication of plants — one of the most transformative events in human history — began independently in at least 10 geographic centers between ~12,000 and 5,000 years ago. The Fertile Crescent (wheat, barley, lenti
S_4_03 — Nuclear War and Civilizational Risk
Nuclear war remains one of the most acute existential threats to human civilization, with approximately 12,500 warheads in global arsenals as of 2024 and the Doomsday Clock at a historic 90 seconds to midnight. Peer-revi
S_4_01 — Existential Risk Taxonomy
Existential risk (x-risk) refers to any event that could permanently curtail humanity's long-term potential — including extinction, civilizational collapse without recovery, or irreversible loss of value (e.g., permanent
S_4_16 — Asteroid Mining & Space Resource Extraction
Asteroid mining — the extraction of mineral resources, water, and volatiles from near-Earth asteroids (NEAs) and main-belt asteroids — represents a theoretically transformative but technically undemonstrated space indust
S_1_09 — Quantum Cryptography and Post-Quantum Security
Quantum cryptography and post-quantum cryptography address the existential threat that quantum computers pose to current encryption. The threat: large-scale quantum computers running Shor's algorithm (Peter Shor, 1994) c
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