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56 results for "informational structural realism" — page 2 of 3
J_3_16 — Roman Concrete and Hydraulic Engineering: Opus Caementicium, Pozzolanic Chemistry, and Structural Legacy
Roman concrete (opus caementicium) is among the most consequential construction materials in architectural history, enabling structures that have endured for over 2,000 years — including the Pantheon dome (43.3 m span, c
Q_1_04 — Multiverse Theories
The multiverse hypothesis — that our observable universe is one of many — arises independently from at least four domains of physics and mathematics: quantum mechanics (Everett's Many-Worlds, 1957), inflationary cosmolog
ZB_1_14 — Animal Architecture: Nests, Webs, Mounds, and Biological Engineering
Animal architecture — the construction of physical structures by non-human organisms for shelter, reproduction, thermoregulation, prey capture, mate attraction, or environmental modification — represents one of the most
ZB_1_06 — Camouflage, Mimicry, and Biological Deception
Camouflage and mimicry represent some of evolution's most sophisticated solutions to the problems of predation and survival. Animals employ an extraordinary toolkit: background matching, disruptive coloration, countersha
ZC_3_06 — Sociology of Law
Sociology of law examines law not as an autonomous system of rules but as a social institution — shaped by power, culture, and economic relations, and in turn shaping social life. Émile Durkheim (The Division of Labour i
ZC_5_09 — Sociology of Race and Ethnicity: Construction, Racism, and Intersectionality
The sociology of race and ethnicity studies how racial and ethnic categories are socially constructed, how racism operates as a system of power, and how racial and ethnic identities shape life chances, social institution
ZC_5_19 — Network Society — Castells
Manuel Castells (born 1942 in Hellín, Spain), professor at the University of Southern California and emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, produced one of the most ambitious sociological analyses of the lat
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_4_04 — Medical Anthropology — Culture, Healing, and the Body
Medical anthropology — the study of how health, illness, healing, and the body are experienced, understood, and managed across cultures — is one of anthropology's most productive subfields, bridging biological and social
G_4_16 — Comparative Mythology as Science — Phylogenetic and Statistical Approaches
Comparative mythology — the systematic study of myths and folktales across cultures to identify shared elements, trace historical relationships, and understand the cognitive and social processes that generate mythologica
G_3_06 — Systems Collapse and Complexity Theory Applied to Civilizations
This document examines Systems Collapse and Complexity Theory Applied to Civilizations, a topic within the Modern Frameworks research area. Key areas of investigation include Tainter's Foundational Thesis, The Western Ro
T_4_10 — Conformity and Obedience: Asch, Milgram, and the Social Psychology of Compliance
The study of conformity (adjusting one's behavior or beliefs to match a group) and obedience (following directives from an authority figure) produced some of the most famous — and disturbing — experiments in the history
T_1_11 — History of Psychology
Psychology's formal history as an independent discipline spans approximately 150 years — from Wilhelm Wundt's founding of the first experimental psychology laboratory in Leipzig (1879) to the present day. The discipline
ZD_5_03 — Semiotics: Signs, Symbols, and Meaning Theory
Semiotics (also semiology) — the study of signs, symbols, and meaning-making processes — is a foundational discipline that bridges linguistics, philosophy, cultural studies, communication theory, visual arts, and informa
ZD_4_11 — Social Network Analysis — Granovetter, Small Worlds, Influence
Social network analysis (SNA) — the study of social structures through the use of graph theory and network science, where individuals (or organizations, nations, etc.) are represented as nodes and their relationships (fr
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
Y_2_12 — Automatism and Automatic Writing: Unconscious Production States
Automatism — the production of writing, drawing, speech, or other complex behavior without conscious intention or deliberate control — occupies a fascinating intersection of altered states of consciousness, art history,
P_3_05 — Philosophy of Science — Demarcation, Method, and Progress
The philosophy of science investigates the foundations, methods, and implications of science — asking what distinguishes science from non-science (the demarcation problem), how scientific theories are confirmed or refute
P_3_12 — Medieval Philosophy: Aquinas, Ockham, and Scholastic Thought
Medieval philosophy spans roughly a millennium of intellectual activity (c. 5th-15th centuries CE) dominated by the project of integrating faith and reason — reconciling the philosophical heritage of ancient Greece (espe
P_5_01 — Is Mathematics Discovered or Invented?
One of the oldest and most consequential questions in philosophy: Does mathematics exist independently of human minds (Platonism), or is it a human invention — a language we construct to describe patterns (formalism/cons
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