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398 results for "auteur theory" — page 18 of 20
W_1_18 — Byzantine Iconoclasm: Theology, Politics, and Image Destruction
Byzantine Iconoclasm (c. 726–843 CE) was the most consequential theological and political crisis in the Eastern Roman Empire's history, centered on whether the creation and veneration of religious images (eikōnes) of Chr
K_5_15 — Neural Fractals & the Edge of Chaos: Brain Criticality and Complexity
The brain is poised at a critical point between order and chaos — and its fractality is not an accident but a functional necessity. In 2003, John Beggs and Dietmar Plenz published one of neuroscience's landmark papers: t
E_3_17 — Environmental Catastrophe–Civilization Correlation Timeline
Systematic cross-referencing of paleoclimate proxy records (ice cores, speleothems, tree rings, marine sediments) with archaeological and historical records reveals repeated correlations between abrupt environmental shif
E_2_23 — Bronze Age Collapse Synthesis: Multi-Causal Analysis c. 1200 BCE
The Late Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1200–1150 BCE) represents one of history's most dramatic civilizational discontinuities: within approximately 50 years, the interconnected palace economies of the Mycenaean kingdoms, the
Q_1_19 — Cosmic Inflation Alternatives: Bouncing, Cyclic, and Variable Speed of Light Models
Cosmic inflation — the paradigm that the universe underwent exponential expansion in the first ~10⁻³⁶ to 10⁻³² seconds — has been the standard framework for explaining the horizon problem (why the cosmic microwave backgr
Q_4_24 — Modified Gravity Theories: MOND, TeVeS, and f(R) Gravity
Modified gravity theories propose that the observed discrepancies between luminous matter and dynamical mass in galaxies and galaxy clusters — conventionally attributed to dark matter — instead arise from a modification
Q_2_19 — Modified Gravity Theories: MOND, TeVeS & Alternatives to Dark Matter
Modified gravity theories propose that the observed discrepancies between predicted and measured gravitational effects in galaxies and galaxy clusters — conventionally attributed to dark matter — instead result from modi
Q_2_20 — Black Hole Information Paradox & Hawking Radiation
The black hole information paradox is arguably the deepest unsolved problem in theoretical physics, lying at the intersection of general relativity, quantum mechanics, and thermodynamics. In 1974, Stephen Hawking showed
INTERDOC_65 — The Constants of Existence: A Cross-Domain Architecture
[KEY FINDING] The universe appears to run on approximately 30 physical constants (CODATA 2022), none of which are derived from theory. Life on Earth obeys approximately 12 biological constants (genetic code, ATP, homochi
INTERDOC_62 — Chemical Language Systems: Information Encoding from Microbes to Consciousness
Bacterial quorum sensing molecules encode population-density commands with combinatorial logic-gate precision (Bassler and Losick, 2006); microbial short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) direct host immune programming, epigenet
INTERDOC_50 — Jewish Institutional Suppression: A Comprehensive Timeline of Antisemitism, Knowledge Control, and Persecution
Jewish suppression history spans six major categories: (1) Ancient/Seleucid — Antiochus IV Epiphanes (167 BCE) outlawed Torah study, circumcision, and Sabbath observance, triggering the Maccabean revolt; (2) Christian th
ZC_3_13 — Human Rights: Universal Norms and Their Contested Foundations
Human rights — entitlements and protections considered inherent to all human beings regardless of nationality, ethnicity, sex, language, religion, or other status — constitute one of the most influential normative framew
ZC_5_19 — Network Society — Castells
Manuel Castells (born 1942 in Hellín, Spain), professor at the University of Southern California and emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, produced one of the most ambitious sociological analyses of the lat
ZC_4_06 — Foucault — Power, Discourse, and Knowledge Control
Michel Foucault (1926–1984) — French philosopher, historian, and social theorist — is one of the most cited scholars in the humanities and social sciences, and his analyses of power, knowledge, and discourse have transfo
ZC_4_00 — Anthropology Culture: Subfolder Summary
ZC_4_08 — Structuralism in Social Science — Lévi-Strauss to Bourdieu
Structuralism — the intellectual movement that sought to uncover the deep, universal structures underlying the surface diversity of human cultures, languages, myths, kinship systems, and social institutions — was the dom
ZC_2_16 — Social Capital
Social capital — the networks of relationships, norms of reciprocity, and trust that facilitate collective action and cooperation within and between groups — emerged as one of the most influential and contested concepts
G_4_22 — Emergence and Self-Organization: From Physics to Biology
Emergence — the appearance of macroscopic properties that are not reducible to the behavior of individual components — is one of the most important and contested concepts in modern science and philosophy. From Bénard con
G_3_12 — Morphic Resonance and Formative Causation
Morphic resonance is a hypothesis proposed by Rupert Sheldrake (1981, A New Science of Life) that posits the existence of morphic fields — non-local, non-energetic fields that carry information about the habits (forms an
G_3_13 — Self-Organization from Atoms to Civilizations
Self-organization is the process by which ordered, complex structures emerge spontaneously from simpler components without centralized control or external direction — driven by local interactions among parts that collect
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