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285 results for "war elephants" — page 2 of 15
ZF_1_05 — Tsunami Science and Warning Systems
Tsunamis — long-wavelength ocean waves generated by sudden displacement of the water column — are among the most destructive natural hazards, capable of crossing entire ocean basins and devastating coastlines thousands o
K_3_12 — Blindsight and Unconscious Vision: Seeing Without Awareness
Blindsight is a neurological phenomenon in which individuals who are cortically blind — having lost conscious visual experience in part or all of their visual field due to damage to the primary visual cortex (V1/striate
K_2_04 — Attention and Awareness
Attention and awareness are intimately linked yet dissociable aspects of consciousness. Attention — the selective processing of some information at the expense of other information — is a fundamental bottleneck in human
E_2_20 — Medieval Warm Period: Climate Optimum and Civilizational Flourishing
The Medieval Warm Period (MWP) — increasingly referred to in scientific literature as the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA) to emphasize its complex spatial patterns — was a period of relatively warm climatic conditions acr
Q_2_16 — White Dwarfs, Type Ia Supernovae, and Standard Candles
White dwarfs — the remnant cores of low- and intermediate-mass stars (initial mass < ~8 M☉, ~97% of all stars) — are dense objects supported against gravitational collapse by electron degeneracy pressure, with typical ma
ZC_2_01 — Propaganda, Persuasion, and Information Warfare
Propaganda and persuasion studies span rhetoric, psychology, political science, and media studies. From Edward Bernays's Freudian public relations (1928) and Walter Lippmann's manufactured consent (1922), through Goebbel
T_4_14 — Social Comparison Theory: Festinger, Upward/Downward Comparison, and Social Media
Social comparison theory, introduced by Leon Festinger (1954), proposes that humans have a fundamental drive to evaluate their abilities and opinions — and in the absence of objective, non-social standards, they do so by
D_4_07 — Underwater Ruins of Dwarka: Submerged Indian City
Dwarka (also Dvaraka or Dwaraka) — a modern city on the western tip of Gujarat's Saurashtra Peninsula, India, fronting the Gulf of Kutch and the Arabian Sea — is revered in Hindu tradition as the legendary kingdom of Lor
ZD_1_14 — Type Theory: Lambda Calculus, Dependent Types, and the Curry-Howard Correspondence
Type theory is a foundational framework in mathematics, logic, and computer science that classifies values and expressions into types — categories that determine what operations are valid: a natural number can be added t
ZD_4_16 — Swarm Intelligence & Self-Organizing Systems: Decentralized Problem-Solving
Swarm intelligence (SI) — the emergent collective behavior of decentralized, self-organized systems in which simple agents following local rules produce globally intelligent, adaptive solutions without central control —
ZD_2_11 — Reinforcement Learning: Agents, Rewards, and Sequential Decision-Making
Reinforcement learning (RL) is a paradigm of machine learning in which an agent learns to make sequential decisions by interacting with an environment, receiving rewards (or penalties) for its actions, and adjusting its
Y_2_08 — Anesthesia, Consciousness, and Awareness
General anesthesia — the pharmacological induction of unconsciousness, amnesia, analgesia, and immobility — is one of the most profound alterations of consciousness that humans routinely produce, yet how anesthetics actu
Y_1_18 — Addiction Neurochemistry: Reward Circuits, Tolerance & Therapeutic Frontiers
Addiction — now formally termed substance use disorder (SUD, DSM-5) — is a chronic, relapsing brain disorder characterized by compulsive drug seeking despite harmful consequences, affecting approximately 35 million peopl
H_4_32 — Information Warfare, Propaganda & Manufactured Consent
Information warfare — the deliberate use of information and communication systems to gain strategic advantage — is as old as organized conflict, but the modern era has industrialized it. From Edward Bernays's founding of
P_4_15 — Japanese Philosophy: Zen, Bushido, Wabi-Sabi, Mono no Aware
Japanese philosophy encompasses a rich, distinctive tradition that has woven together indigenous Shinto concepts (sacredness of nature, ritual purity, musubi — the vital creative force), continental imports from Chinese
ZE_4_01 — Just War Theory and Ethics of Violence
Just war theory — the ethical framework for evaluating when the use of military force is morally justified and how it may be conducted — has roots in classical antiquity (Cicero, Augustine) and medieval theology (Aquinas
S_4_03 — Nuclear War and Civilizational Risk
Nuclear war remains one of the most acute existential threats to human civilization, with approximately 12,500 warheads in global arsenals as of 2024 and the Doomsday Clock at a historic 90 seconds to midnight. Peer-revi
S_4_07 — Autonomous Weapons Systems — AI, Lethal Autonomy, and the Future of Warfare
Autonomous weapons systems (AWS) represent one of the most consequential intersections of artificial intelligence and military technology. The trajectory from early automated defensive systems (Phalanx CIWS, 1980) throug
F_4_11 — Indo-European Migrations: Yamnaya, Corded Ware, and the Steppe Hypothesis
The Indo-European language family — comprising roughly 450 languages spoken by nearly half the world's population — traces its origins to pastoralist communities of the Pontic-Caspian steppe between approximately 4500 an
I_3_09 — Foo Fighters and World War II Anomalous Observations
"Foo fighters" — a term coined by American military aircrews during World War II — refers to unexplained luminous phenomena observed by Allied (and reportedly Axis) pilots in both the European and Pacific Theaters from a
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