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2,367 results for "Temple of the Feathered Serpent" — page 2 of 119
INTERDOC_27 — The Serpent Symbol: Global Inversion from Sacred to Evil
[KEY FINDING] The serpent is the single most universal sacred symbol in human culture. Every inhabited continent produced independent serpent veneration: Wadjet and Uraeus (Egypt — the cobra on the pharaoh's crown repres
G_3_28 — Phlogiston Theory: Productive Fiction and the Birth of Chemistry
Phlogiston theory — developed by German chemist and physician Georg Ernst Stahl in the early 18th century — held that all combustible materials contain a fire-principle called phlogiston (from the Greek phlogistós, "burn
D_1_15 — Angkor Thom and Bayon: Faces of the Devaraja
Angkor Thom ("Great City") — the last and most enduring capital city of the Khmer Empire — was built by Jayavarman VII (r. c. 1181–1218 CE) as a walled, moated urban complex of approximately 9 square kilometers in presen
B_2_20 — World Serpent Comparative: Jörmungandr, Ouroboros, Shesha, and Global Serpent Cosmologies
The World Serpent — a cosmic serpent that encircles, supports, or threatens the world — is among the most widespread and persistent motifs in human mythology, appearing independently in traditions separated by vast dista
B_3_09 — Dragon Typology — Cross-Cultural Serpent-Dragon Traditions
Dragons and giant serpents appear in nearly every major mythological tradition worldwide — European fire-breathing dragons, Chinese lóng (beneficent celestial beings), Mesoamerican feathered serpents, Australian Aborigin
Y_3_01 — Kundalini and Serpent Energy Traditions
Kundalini ("coiled one" in Sanskrit) describes a dormant serpent-like energy said to reside at the base of the spine, which, when "awakened" through meditation, breathwork, or spontaneous experience, rises through a cent
P_1_13 — Paradoxes in Philosophy: Zeno, Liar, Ship of Theseus, Sorites
A paradox is an argument that proceeds from apparently acceptable premises via apparently valid reasoning to a conclusion that is apparently unacceptable — forcing us either to reject a premise, identify a flaw in the re
V_1_04 — Sacred Geometry — Mathematical Patterns in Ancient Design
Sacred geometry refers to the attribution of symbolic, cosmological, or divine meaning to geometric forms and mathematical ratios — a practice documented in ancient Egyptian, Greek, Islamic, Hindu, Buddhist, and medieval
V_1_16 — History of Mathematical Notation: Symbols, Conventions, and Communication
The history of mathematical notation reveals that mathematics is not merely a body of truths but also a system of communication whose power depends critically on the symbols used to express it. Good notation does not mer
V_4_26 — Philosophy of Mathematics: Foundations, Reality, and Discovery vs. Invention
The philosophy of mathematics asks the deepest questions about the nature of mathematical objects: Do numbers, sets, and geometric forms exist independently of human minds (Platonism/realism), or are they human construct
M_2_14 — Tiwanaku and the Altiplano — High-Altitude Anomalous Engineering
Tiwanaku (also spelled Tiahuanaco) — located at 3,850 meters elevation on the Bolivian Altiplano, approximately 20 km southeast of Lake Titicaca — was the capital of one of the most significant pre-Columbian civilization
A_2_19 — Apocalypse of Abraham: Jewish Pseudepigraphon and Cosmological Vision
The Apocalypse of Abraham is a Jewish pseudepigraphon composed in the late 1st or early 2nd century CE, surviving exclusively in Old Slavonic (Church Slavonic) manuscripts dating from the 14th century onward. The text co
A_3_01 — Kebra Nagast: The Glory of Kings (Ethiopian)
The Kebra Nagast ("Glory of Kings") is a 14th-century CE Ethiopian text — written in Ge'ez, the classical Ethiopian liturgical language — that serves as the foundation myth of the Solomonic dynasty of Ethiopia and the sp
U_4_06 — Architecture as Sacred Art — Cathedrals, Mosques, Temples
Sacred architecture represents humanity's most ambitious attempt to materialize the divine in built form — encoding theological doctrines, cosmological models, mathematical principles, and ritual programs into stone, woo
W_4_01 — Maya Epigraphy, Astronomy, and Calendar Science
The Maya civilization developed one of the most sophisticated writing systems in the pre-Columbian Americas — a mixed logographic-syllabic script that recorded history, astronomy, mythology, and ritual on stone monuments
W_4_05 — Iroquois Confederacy and the Great Law of Peace
The Haudenosaunee (People of the Longhouse), commonly known as the Iroquois Confederacy, created one of the world's oldest continuous systems of participatory governance, uniting five — later six — nations under the Grea
C_5_21 — Serpent-DNA Visual Parallels: The Double Helix in Ancient Iconography
Entwined serpent imagery — two serpents coiling around a central axis — appears across civilizations separated by vast distances and millennia: the caduceus of Greek Hermes (two serpents around a winged staff), the Nehus
C_5_01 — Cognitive Anthropology of Serpent Archetypes
This document examines the evolutionary and cognitive science explanations for why serpent beings appear in virtually every human culture. Snake Detection Theory (Isbell, 2009) proposes that primates evolved superior vis
C_2_02 — The Flood-Serpent Connection
Across 14 major flood traditions — Sumerian, Babylonian, Biblical, Hindu, Chinese, Maya, Aboriginal, Greek, Norse, and others — a consistent dual-force structure emerges: a sky/authority deity destroys, while a serpent/w
K_3_15 — Anesthesia and the Mechanisms of Consciousness Loss
General anesthesia — the reversible abolition of consciousness through pharmacological agents — is one of the most remarkable phenomena in medicine: it routinely eliminates subjective experience in millions of patients d
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