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49 results for "identity" — page 2 of 3
INTERDOC_69 — Suppression and Cascade Risk as Entangled Institutional Failure Modes
Two phenomena that appear to belong to different domains — knowledge suppression (why institutions reject inconvenient truths) and cascade collapse (why complex civilizations fail catastrophically) — share a common deep
K_2_01 — Split-Brain Research and Divided Consciousness
Split-brain research — the study of patients whose corpus callosum has been surgically severed to treat intractable epilepsy — stands as one of neuroscience's most philosophically consequential experimental programs. Rog
ZG_5_02 — Narrative Structure: Story Grammar and Discourse Analysis
Narrative structure — the recurring patterns by which humans organize events into stories — is one of the most fundamental and universal features of human cognition and communication. From Aristotle's observation (c. 335
ZG_4_10 — Code-Switching and Multilingual Discourse
Code-switching is the practice of alternating between two or more languages (or language varieties) within a single conversation, sentence, or even a single word — a phenomenon observed wherever multilingual speakers int
INTERDOC_34 — Mathematics, Nature, and the Universal Language
[KEY FINDING] Eugene Wigner's 1960 essay "The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences" (Communications in Pure and Applied Mathematics) posed what remains one of the deepest unsolved problems in
INTERDOC_58 — The Mechanism of Suppression: Institutional Cognitive Dissonance from 4th-Century Councils to 21st-Century Peer Review
Suppression of inconvenient knowledge is not primarily about conspiracy. It is about a psychological-institutional mechanism that recurs across very different historical contexts using very different surface vocabularies
ZB_2_09 — Biological Regeneration: Limb Regrowth and Tissue Repair
The ability to regenerate lost body parts varies enormously across the animal kingdom. Planarian flatworms can rebuild an entire organism from a fragment 1/279th of the original. Salamanders regenerate complete limbs, ja
ZC_3_09 — Nationalism and Ethnic Conflict
Nationalism — the political principle and cultural sentiment that nations should have their own states — is arguably the most powerful political force of the modern era. Benedict Anderson (Imagined Communities, 1983/1991
ZC_5_01 — Digital Anthropology and Online Communities
Digital anthropology — the study of human social life as it is mediated, shaped, and transformed by digital technologies — has emerged as one of the most rapidly growing subfields in the social sciences as online life ha
ZC_1_01 — Social Psychology — Conformity, Obedience, and Group Dynamics
Social psychology examines how individuals think, feel, and behave in social contexts. Landmark experiments by Milgram (obedience to authority), Asch (conformity to majority opinion), and Zimbardo (situational power of r
ZC_1_14 — Social Media Psychology
Social media usage is now near-universal among adolescents and young adults in developed nations (95% of US teens, Pew 2023), making its psychological effects one of the most debated topics in contemporary psychology. Th
ZC_1_04 — Crowd Psychology & Mass Movements
Crowd psychology — the study of how individuals behave differently when part of a large group — has been a central concern of social science since Gustave Le Bon's The Crowd (1895), one of the most influential and contro
ZC_1_13 — Psychology of Prejudice and Discrimination
Prejudice — negative attitudes toward a group and its members — operates through cognitive (stereotypes), affective (prejudice), and behavioral (discrimination) components. Research reveals both overt and subtle forms of
ZC_4_05 — Tourism, Heritage, and the Anthropology of Sacred Sites
The anthropology of tourism and heritage examines how places, objects, and practices are designated as culturally significant, how they are consumed by visitors, and who controls the narratives, profits, and meanings at
ZC_4_03 — Ethnomusicology — Music as Social Phenomenon
Ethnomusicology — the study of music in its cultural context, or more precisely, the study of music as culture and culture as expressed through music — emerged in the mid-20th century from the older discipline of "compar
T_4_12 — Radicalization: Pathways to Extremism, Terrorism, and Deradicalization
Radicalization — the process by which individuals adopt increasingly extreme political, social, or religious ideologies that justify violence as a means of achieving group or personal goals — has become one of the most i
T_4_03 — Group Psychology and Crowd Behavior
Group psychology examines how individuals' thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are influenced by the presence and actions of others — from small groups to mass crowds. Foundational research includes Gustave Le Bon's The Cr
T_5_15 — Sport Psychology: Flow States, Peak Performance, and Mental Training
Sport psychology — the scientific study of psychological factors influencing athletic performance, exercise behavior, and physical activity — spans applied mental skills training (visualization, self-talk, goal setting,
Y_2_06 — Dissociation, Depersonalization, and Derealization
Dissociation — the disruption of normally integrated functions of consciousness, memory, identity, emotion, perception, behavior, and sense of self — represents one of the most revealing natural experiments for understan
H_2_10 — Archaeological Nationalism: Weaponizing the Past
Archaeological nationalism is the systematic appropriation of archaeological evidence, historical narratives, and cultural heritage to serve nationalist political agendas — constructing, validating, or legitimizing claim
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