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39 results for "four humors" — page 2 of 2
C_4_09 — Pueblo, Hopi, and Ancestral Puebloan Traditions
The Pueblo peoples — including the Hopi, Zuni, Acoma, and Tewa communities — maintain among the most continuous cultural traditions in North America, with deep roots in the Ancestral Puebloan (formerly "Anasazi") civiliz
ZF_4_09 — Seagrass and Coastal Carbon Sequestration (Blue Carbon)
Blue carbon refers to the carbon captured and stored by coastal and marine ecosystems — primarily seagrass meadows, mangrove forests, and salt marshes — which sequester carbon at rates per unit area far exceeding terrest
J_5_02 — Chinese Ancient Technology — Seismograph, Compass, Printing, Paper
Ancient China produced a series of technological innovations that preceded comparable European developments by centuries or millennia, fundamentally shaping global civilization. The "Four Great Inventions" — papermaking
G_3_08 — Water Anomalies — Structured Water, Memory Claims, and EZ Water
Water (H₂O) is simultaneously the most familiar and most anomalous substance on Earth. Its seemingly simple molecular structure belies a staggering array of anomalous properties — at least 72 documented anomalies compare
G_2_15 — Cognitive Archaeology — Mind in the Archaeological Record
Cognitive archaeology investigates the cognitive abilities, mental processes, and symbolic capacities of past peoples through the material record they left behind — seeking to understand not just what ancient people did,
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
P_3_07 — Aristotle — Natural Philosophy, Cosmology, and Legacy
Aristotle (384–322 BCE) was a Greek philosopher and polymath whose works constitute the single most influential body of thought in the history of Western and Islamic intellectual tradition. A student of Plato for twenty
P_4_06 — Buddhist Philosophy — Dependent Origination, Non-Self, and Emptiness
Buddhist philosophy — developed from the teachings attributed to Siddhārtha Gautama (c. 5th century BCE) and elaborated over 2,500 years across diverse Asian cultures — offers one of the most rigorous philosophical analy
P_1_03 — Panpsychism and Modern Philosophy of Mind
Panpsychism — the view that consciousness or experience is a fundamental and ubiquitous feature of reality — has undergone a dramatic revival in academic philosophy over the past two decades. Once dismissed as primitive
P_1_15 — Philosophy of Information: Floridi, Digital Ethics, and the Infosphere
The philosophy of information (PI) is a relatively young branch of philosophy that investigates the conceptual nature and basic principles of information, including its dynamics (computation, information flow), its utili
P_1_06 — Personal Identity and Continuity
Personal identity — the question of what makes you you over time, and under what conditions you would cease to exist — is one of philosophy's most ancient and practically urgent problems. The core puzzle is persistence:
P_5_16 — Philosophy of Information: Data, Knowledge, and Meaning in the Digital Age
The philosophy of information (PI) is a relatively new branch of philosophy that investigates the conceptual nature and fundamental principles of information — including its dynamics, utilization, and science. The field
N_5_02 — Voodoo Societies — Haiti, New Orleans, and Hidden Power
Vodou (Haitian Vodou), Vodun (West African), and Voodoo (Louisiana/New Orleans) — related but distinct religious systems of the African diaspora — contain within them powerful secret society structures that have served a
ZA_2_06 — Spacetime Geometry: Minkowski, Causal Structure, and Light Cones
Spacetime — the four-dimensional continuum unifying space and time — is the arena in which all physics takes place. Einstein's special relativity (1905) revealed that space and time are not separate absolutes but are int
V_1_06 — Mathematics of Music: Harmonic Ratios & Tuning Systems
The relationship between mathematics and music is among the oldest in intellectual history. Pythagoras (c. 570–495 BCE) is traditionally credited with discovering that consonant musical intervals correspond to simple num
V_4_17 — Quantum Computing Algorithms: From Shor's Factoring to Variational Quantum Eigensolvers
Quantum computing exploits the principles of quantum superposition, entanglement, and interference to perform computations that are intractable for classical computers. The field was conceptually launched by Richard Feyn
V_3_15 — Functional Analysis: Infinite-Dimensional Spaces and Operators
Functional analysis — the study of infinite-dimensional vector spaces (function spaces) and the linear operators acting on them — is one of the great unifying frameworks of 20th-century mathematics. It provides the rigor
V_3_06 — Differential Equations: Modeling Change and Dynamics
Differential equations describe how quantities change and are the primary mathematical language of physics, engineering, biology, and economics. From Newton's second law (F = ma, a second-order ODE) to Einstein's field e
V_2_08 — Mathematical Proof: History & Philosophy
Mathematical proof — the definitive demonstration that a statement follows necessarily from accepted axioms — is the distinguishing feature of mathematics as a discipline. The axiomatic-deductive method originated with t
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