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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
36 results for "contemporary dance" — page 2 of 2
ZB_5_23 — Bioacoustics & Animal Communication
Bioacoustics — the study of biological sound production, transmission, and reception — reveals a hidden world of communication systems of extraordinary sophistication. Humpback whale songs contain hierarchical structure
G_4_24 — Post-Scarcity Economics and Resource-Based Models
Post-scarcity economics addresses the theoretical conditions under which advanced automation, AI, and energy abundance could eliminate material scarcity as the organizing principle of economic life. The concept has deep
ZD_4_07 — Human-Computer Interaction
Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) studies how people interact with computers and designs systems that are effective, efficient, and satisfying to use. HCI draws on computer science, cognitive psychology, design, and ergon
L_4_07 — Twin Studies and Heritability
Twin studies represent one of the most powerful natural experiments in human genetics, exploiting the fact that monozygotic (MZ, "identical") twins share ~100% of their DNA while dizygotic (DZ, "fraternal") twins share ~
Y_4_11 — Trance States Across Cultures
Trance — an altered state of consciousness characterized by narrowed or shifted attention, altered sense of self, reduced awareness of external surroundings, and modified responsiveness — is one of the most universal fea
Y_4_13 — Collective Effervescence and Group Altered States
Collective effervescence — Émile Durkheim's term (The Elementary Forms of Religious Life, 1912) for the heightened emotional energy generated when people gather and act together in coordinated ritual — describes a group
Y_4_19 — Ritual-Induced Ecstasy
Ritual-induced ecstasy — altered states of consciousness produced through collective ceremonial practices including dance, chanting, drumming, fasting, pain ordeal, and rhythmic movement — is one of the oldest and most u
Y_5_07 — Phenomenology of Pain and Pain Modulation
Pain — defined by the International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP, revised 2020) as "an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with, or resembling that associated with, actual or potential tissu
Y_3_10 — Fasting, Asceticism, and Altered Consciousness
Fasting and ascetic practices — deliberate deprivation of food, sleep, comfort, or sensory input — have been used across virtually all religious and spiritual traditions to induce altered states of consciousness, visions
N_5_04 — Secret Initiatory Traditions in Indigenous America
The indigenous peoples of the Americas developed an extraordinary diversity of secret initiatory societies — ceremonial organizations with restricted membership, graded initiation, guarded esoteric knowledge, and defined
N_3_05 — Gurdjieff, the Fourth Way, and Esoteric Schools
George Ivanovich Gurdjieff (c. 1866-1949) was one of the most enigmatic and influential spiritual teachers of the 20th century, whose "Fourth Way" system proposed that ordinary human beings live in a state of mechanical
R_3_11 — Microevolution and Rapid Adaptation
Microevolution — changes in allele frequencies within populations over generations — is the fundamental engine of biological adaptation. Once assumed to operate too slowly to observe directly, research over the past 50 y
S_4_12 — Space Debris: Kessler Syndrome, Orbital Pollution, and Cleanup Tech
Space debris — defunct satellites, spent rocket stages, fragmentation debris, paint flakes, and other artificial objects orbiting Earth — poses a growing threat to space operations, astronaut safety, and the long-term su
S_3_14 — Agricultural Robotics: Precision Farming and Automated Harvest
Agricultural robotics and precision farming — the application of robotics, sensors, GPS, AI, and data analytics to optimize agricultural production — are transforming food production in response to growing demand (global
ZE_5_00 — Applied Contemporary Ethics: Subfolder Summary
U_2_14 — Minimalism in Art: Reduction, Silence, and Essential Form
Minimalism — emerging in the early 1960s in New York as a radical reaction against the emotional excess of Abstract Expressionism — reduced art to its most fundamental elements: simple geometric forms, industrial materia
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