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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
2,469 results for "Truth and Reconciliation Commission" — page 19 of 124
T_3_11 — Color Psychology and Synesthesia
Color psychology examines how color perception influences cognition, emotion, and behavior, while synesthesia is a neurological condition in which stimulation of one sensory modality automatically triggers perception in
T_3_09 — Psychology of Perception and Illusions
Perception — the process by which the brain interprets sensory information to construct a model of the external world — is not a passive recording but an active, constructive process shaped by expectations, context, and
T_3_05 — Psychology of Motivation and Drive
Motivation — the processes that initiate, direct, and sustain goal-directed behavior — is one of psychology's most extensively studied domains, with applications spanning education, workplace productivity, health behavio
T_5_13 — Psycholinguistics: Language and Thought, Sapir-Whorf, and the Cognitive Science of Language
Psycholinguistics — the scientific study of the cognitive processes underlying language comprehension, production, and acquisition — investigates how the mind/brain processes the ~1 billion words a person hears, reads, s
T_5_12 — Media Psychology: Screen Effects, Social Media, and the Psychology of Digital Life
Media psychology — the study of how media (television, film, video games, social media, smartphones) affect cognition, emotion, behavior, and well-being — has become one of the most publicly debated areas of psychology,
T_5_23 — Psychogeography: Environment, Perception, and the Politics of Space
Psychogeography — the study of how geographic environments affect emotions, behavior, and perception — originated as a radical political and artistic practice within the Situationist International of the 1950s–60s, led b
D_2_07 — Persepolis: Achaemenid Architecture, Apadana Reliefs, and Imperial Ideology
Persepolis (Old Persian: Pārsa; modern Takht-e Jamshid, Fars Province, Iran) was the ceremonial capital of the Achaemenid Persian Empire, constructed primarily under Darius I (r. 522–486 BCE) and his son Xerxes I (r. 486
D_2_01 — Maltese Temple Builders and the Ħal Saflieni Hypogeum
The Maltese Temple Period (~3600–2500 BCE) produced the oldest free-standing structures on Earth — predating the Egyptian pyramids by ~1,000 years and Stonehenge by ~1,500 years. The tiny Maltese islands (316 km² total —
D_2_06 — Ur: Woolley's Excavations, the Royal Cemetery, and the Standard of Ur
Ur (modern Tell al-Muqayyar, southern Iraq) is one of the most important archaeological sites in Mesopotamia. Leonard Woolley's excavations (1922–1934), conducted jointly by the British Museum and the University of Penns
D_1_08 — Tiwanaku and Puma Punku Deep Dive
Tiwanaku, situated at 3,825m elevation on the Bolivian Altiplano near the shores of Lake Titicaca, was the highest-altitude imperial capital in the ancient world. Flourishing from approximately 300 to 1000 CE, its influe
D_1_10 — Petra — Rock-Cut Architecture and Hydrological Engineering
Petra, the ancient Nabataean capital hidden within the sandstone mountains of southern Jordan, represents one of the most extraordinary achievements in rock-cut architecture. Established as the Nabataean capital by the 4
D_1_06 — Carnac, Avebury, and European Megalithic Alignments
Europe's megalithic tradition extends from Portugal to Scandinavia and spans roughly 4800–1500 BCE, encompassing thousands of stone circles, standing stones (menhirs), stone rows, dolmens, and passage tombs. The Carnac a
D_1_05 — Stonehenge and the British Megalithic Complex
Stonehenge on Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire, is Britain's most iconic prehistoric monument, constructed in multiple phases between approximately 3100 and 1500 BCE — a span of over 1,600 years. The site features massive sars
D_1_09 — Newgrange, Knowth, and Passage Tomb Astronomy
Newgrange, constructed around 3200 BCE in the Boyne Valley (Brú na Bóinne) of County Meath, Ireland, is one of the most remarkable Neolithic structures in the world — older than the Egyptian pyramids by approximately 700
D_1_22 — Pacific Island Megalithic: Nan Madol, Lelu Ruins, and Oceanic Stone Architecture
Nan Madol — a ceremonial complex of 92 artificial islets spread across a shallow lagoon off the southeast coast of Pohnpei (Federated States of Micronesia) — is one of the most enigmatic megalithic sites on Earth and has
D_5_22 — Sacred Temple Architecture: Ritual Space, Cosmic Geometry, and Divine Dwelling
Sacred temple architecture — the deliberate design of built environments to serve as dwelling places for deities, sites of ritual performance, and physical expressions of cosmological order — represents one of humanity's
D_5_06 — Fractals and Scale Invariance
Fractals — shapes and patterns that repeat at every scale of magnification — were formalized by Benoît Mandelbrot in The Fractal Geometry of Nature (1982) as a new mathematical language for describing the IRREGULAR forms
D_5_11 — Sacred Architecture Principles — Temple Orientation, Proportion, and Cosmic Design
Sacred architecture is the deliberate design of built structures to encode cosmological meaning, induce altered states of consciousness, and create a boundary between the profane world and sacred space. Across cultures a
D_5_07 — Handbag / Knowledge Container Motif
One of the most puzzling cross-cultural motifs in ancient art: a "handbag" or bucket-shaped object appears in the hands of divine and semi-divine beings across civilizations separated by thousands of miles and thousands
D_5_04 — Pythagorean Harmony, Sacred Sound, and the Music of the Spheres
The Pythagorean discovery that musical harmony is governed by simple mathematical ratios (octave = 2:1, fifth = 3:2, fourth = 4:3) is one of the most consequential insights in intellectual history — the first demonstrati
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