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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
80 results for "historical trauma" — page 2 of 4
H_4_25 — Information Warfare and Historical Revisionism: Modern Threats
Information warfare — the strategic use of information (and misinformation) to achieve political, military, or economic objectives — has entered a new and qualitatively different phase in the digital era. While propagand
P_5_22 — Cyclical Time: Eternal Return, Historical Cycles, and Non-Linear Temporality
The concept of cyclical time — that history, cosmic processes, or existence itself follows recurring patterns rather than a single linear progression — is one of the most ancient and widespread ideas in human thought. Vi
ZE_4_10 — Ethics of Memory — Forgetting, Memorialization, and Historical Justice
The ethics of memory examines moral obligations related to remembering, forgetting, and representing the past — who has the right to decide what is remembered, how it is commemorated, and what is allowed to be forgotten.
I_5_07 — Pre-Modern UAP Accounts — Historical Sightings
Accounts of anomalous aerial phenomena predate the modern UFO era (1947) by millennia. Classical authors including Livy, Pliny the Elder, Plutarch, and Josephus recorded "prodigies" involving shields, spears, and armies
X_5_14 — Emergency & Critical Care Medicine: From Battlefield Triage to Modern Intensive Care
Emergency medicine and critical care medicine represent two interconnected disciplines born from crisis — battlefield carnage, epidemic waves, and the realization that rapid intervention separates survival from death. Em
X_3_11 — Battlefield Medicine: Surgical Innovation Under Fire
Battlefield medicine — the practice of treating wounded soldiers under active combat conditions — has been one of the most powerful and paradoxical engines of medical innovation in human history. The pressure of mass cas
INTERDOC_74 — Transgenerational Epigenetic Inheritance: Confirmed Mechanisms and Honest Limits
[KEY FINDING] Specific environmentally-induced epigenetic states (notably from severe famine and from controlled fear-conditioning paradigms) can survive embryonic reprogramming and influence offspring phenotype across o
E_1_14 — Supernovae in Human History: Crab Nebula, SN 1006, Vela
Supernovae — the catastrophic explosions of massive stars (core-collapse, Type II/Ib/Ic) or white dwarfs exceeding the Chandrasekhar mass limit (thermonuclear, Type Ia) — are among the most energetic events in the univer
U_5_07 — Art Therapy and Healing Through Art
Art therapy — the clinical use of art-making within a therapeutic relationship to improve psychological well-being — and the broader phenomenon of healing through creative expression bridge the domains of art, psychology
ZH_2_08 — Astronomical Dating of Ancient Texts and Events
Astronomical dating — the use of recorded or described celestial events (eclipses, planetary conjunctions, solstice positions, heliacal risings, and precessional indicators) to fix the absolute dates of ancient texts and
C_1_15 — Oral Tradition Fidelity: How Accurately Do Myths Preserve Historical Facts?
Oral traditions have long been treated with skepticism by historians trained in text-based source criticism, yet mounting evidence suggests that under certain conditions, oral narratives can preserve accurate information
Z_3_02 — Epigenetic Inheritance & Transgenerational Effects
Epigenetic inheritance refers to the transmission of phenotypic information across generations through mechanisms other than changes in DNA sequence. The three primary molecular mechanisms — DNA methylation, histone modi
Z_1_01 — ENCODE Project, Non-Coding DNA & Epigenetics
The human genome is ~3.2 billion base pairs long, but only ~1.5% encodes proteins. The remaining ~98.5% was once dismissed as "junk DNA." The ENCODE Project (2003–present) revealed that at least 80% of the genome has bio
E_3_19 — Volcanic Aerosol Forcing and Historical Climate Disruption
Explosive volcanic eruptions inject sulfur dioxide (SO₂) into the stratosphere, where it converts to sulfate aerosol particles (H₂SO₄) that reflect incoming solar radiation and cool Earth's surface for 1–3 years. This pr
E_1_08 — Ancient Supernovae and Their Cultural Impact
Supernovae — the explosive deaths of massive stars — are among the most energetic events in the universe, capable of briefly outshining entire galaxies. When they occur within our galaxy at distances of a few thousand li
ZG_5_06 — Lexicography: Dictionary Making from Johnson to Digital
Lexicography — the art and science of dictionary making — is among the oldest scholarly enterprises concerned with language, stretching from ancient Mesopotamian word lists (Sumerian-Akkadian bilingual glossaries, c. 230
ZC_3_11 — Warfare and Conflict — Anthropological Perspectives
The anthropology of warfare and conflict addresses one of the most consequential and contested questions in the human sciences: is organized violence a universal feature of human societies, an evolutionary inheritance, o
ZC_5_18 — Disaster Resilience & Cultural Recovery: Anthropological Perspectives
Disaster resilience — the capacity of communities to absorb, adapt to, and recover from catastrophic events while maintaining essential functions and identity — is increasingly understood not as a property of infrastruct
G_4_09 — Bioarchaeology and Forensic Anthropology: Reading the Dead
Bioarchaeology—the study of human remains from archaeological contexts—transforms skeletons from anonymous objects into biographical records of individual lives. Through stable isotope analysis of bone and tooth enamel,
T_2_08 — Neuropsychology and Brain Damage
Neuropsychology studies the relationship between brain structure/function and behavior — using patterns of cognitive impairment following brain damage to infer how the intact brain organizes mental processes.
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