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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,717 documents 34 sections 47,686 citations 34,596+ keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

1,868 results for "Alexander the Great" — page 24 of 94

Y_1_06 Altered States

Y_1_06 — Psychedelic Research — Modern Science and Ancient Entheogen Parallels

Psychedelic research has undergone a dramatic revival since ~2006, with major studies at Johns Hopkins, Imperial College London, NYU, and MAPS demonstrating the therapeutic potential of psilocybin, MDMA, and ayahuasca/DM

psychedelic entheogen psilocybin DMT ayahuasca LSD
Y_1_18 Verified Altered States

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

addiction neurochemistry dopamine-reward mesolimbic-pathway opioid-crisis tolerance-dependence
H_1_18 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_1_18 — Library of Alexandria: Destruction and the Knowledge-Loss Question

The Library of Alexandria was the most ambitious knowledge-collection project of antiquity, founded under Ptolemy I Soter (~290s BCE) and developed by Ptolemy II Philadelphus as part of the Mouseion — a state-funded rese

Library of Alexandria Mouseion Serapeum Ptolemaic Egypt Caesar 48 BCE Theophilus 391 CE
H_3_10 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_3_10 — Museum Ethics — Who Owns the Past?

The question of who owns the past — and specifically, who has rightful custody of archaeological objects, cultural artifacts, and human remains — is the central ethical controversy in contemporary museum practice. The de

museum ethics repatriation cultural property NAGPRA Elgin Marbles Parthenon marbles
P_3_11 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_3_11 — Neoplatonism: Plotinus, Proclus, and the One

Neoplatonism is the philosophical and spiritual system founded by Plotinus (c. 204-270 CE) and elaborated by his successors — notably Porphyry (c. 234-305), Iamblichus (c. 245-325), and Proclus (412-485) — which reinterp

Neoplatonism Plotinus Proclus the One emanation Enneads
P_3_13 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_3_13 — Kant: Transcendental Idealism and the Limits of Reason

Immanuel Kant (1724-1804), professor at the University of Königsberg in East Prussia, produced what is widely regarded as the most transformative body of work in modern Western philosophy. His three Critiques — the Criti

Kant Immanuel Kant transcendental idealism Critique of Pure Reason a priori synthetic a priori
P_3_04 Philosophy & Meaning

P_3_04 — Phenomenology — Consciousness and the Structure of Experience

Phenomenology, founded by Edmund Husserl at the turn of the 20th century, is the systematic study of the structures of consciousness and the phenomena that appear within it. Through its central methodological innovations

phenomenology Husserl intentionality epoché transcendental reduction Heidegger
P_3_06 Philosophy & Meaning

P_3_06 — Plato — Forms, Cosmology, and the Philosophical Tradition

Plato (428/427–348/347 BCE) is the foundational figure of Western philosophy, whose dialogues established the frameworks for metaphysics (Theory of Forms), epistemology (knowledge as recollection), political philosophy (

Plato Platonic philosophy Theory of Forms Timaeus allegory of the cave Republic
P_3_03 Philosophy & Meaning

P_3_03 — Existentialism — Freedom, Anxiety, and Authentic Being

Existentialism is the philosophical movement that places individual existence, freedom, and choice at the center of philosophical inquiry. Originating with Kierkegaard's rebellion against Hegelian system-building and Nie

existentialism Kierkegaard Nietzsche Heidegger Sartre Camus
P_4_03 Philosophy & Meaning

P_4_03 — Language, Naming, and the Creative Word

Across unrelated civilizations, language — specifically the spoken word — is understood as a creative force, not merely a communication tool. The Egyptian god Ptah creates the world through speech; the Hebrew God speaks

language naming creative word logos dabar divine speech
P_4_01 Philosophy & Meaning

P_4_01 — Death and the Afterlife Across Cultures

Every known human culture has developed beliefs about what happens after death — making afterlife cosmology one of the most universal features of human thought. The major frameworks include: judgment and reward/punishmen

death afterlife resurrection reincarnation ancestor worship near-death experience
P_4_09 Philosophy & Meaning

P_4_09 — Non-Dualism — Advaita Vedanta, Taoism, and the Unity of Opposites

Non-dualism — the philosophical position that ultimate reality is not divided into fundamentally opposed categories (subject/object, mind/matter, self/other, good/evil) — appears independently across the world's deepest

non-dualism Advaita Vedanta Shankara Brahman Atman maya
P_1_17 Credible Philosophy & Meaning

P_1_17 — Artificial Intelligence and the Consciousness Question

The question of whether artificial systems can possess consciousness — genuine subjective experience, phenomenal awareness, or "something it is like" to be that system (Thomas Nagel, 1974) — has moved from philosophical

artificial-intelligence machine-consciousness chinese-room hard-problem large-language-models sentience
P_1_02 Philosophy & Meaning

P_1_02 — Philosophical Frameworks for the Meaning of Life

"What is the meaning of life?" is perhaps the oldest philosophical question. Across 2,500+ years of systematic philosophy, four major positions have emerged: (1) Objective meaning — life has a purpose built into reality

meaning of life existentialism absurdism nihilism logotherapy Camus
P_1_01 Philosophy & Meaning

P_1_01 — The Hard Problem of Consciousness

The Hard Problem of Consciousness, defined by philosopher David Chalmers in 1995, asks: Why does physical processing in the brain give rise to subjective experience? We can explain HOW neurons fire (the "easy problems")

consciousness hard problem qualia explanatory gap Chalmers panpsychism
P_1_08 Philosophy & Meaning

P_1_08 — Philosophy of Mind and the Body Problem

The mind-body problem — how do mental states (thoughts, feelings, consciousness) relate to physical states (neurons, brains, bodies)? — is one of the oldest and most intractable problems in philosophy. Descartes (1641) f

philosophy of mind mind-body problem dualism Descartes physicalism materialism
P_5_15 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_5_15 — Simone de Beauvoir: Ethics of Ambiguity and the Second Sex

Simone de Beauvoir (1908–1986) was one of the most important philosophers of the twentieth century — a foundational figure in both existentialist philosophy and feminist theory whose work has shaped debates on freedom, o

Simone de Beauvoir Second Sex Ethics of Ambiguity existentialism feminism existential feminism
P_5_07 Verified Philosophy & Meaning

P_5_07 — Hermeneutics and Interpretation Theory

Hermeneutics — the theory and practice of interpretation — originated in biblical and classical textual criticism but expanded through the 19th and 20th centuries into a comprehensive philosophical framework addressing h

hermeneutics interpretation understanding Schleiermacher Dilthey Gadamer
P_5_04 Philosophy & Meaning

P_5_04 — Process Philosophy — Whitehead and the Metaphysics of Becoming

Process philosophy, most fully developed in Alfred North Whitehead's Process and Reality (1929), proposes that reality is fundamentally constituted not by enduring substances but by dynamic events — "actual occasions of

process philosophy Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality actual occasions prehension eternal objects
P_5_03 Philosophy & Meaning

P_5_03 — Aesthetics — Philosophy of Beauty, Art, and the Sublime

Aesthetics — the philosophical study of beauty, art, taste, and the sublime — has been a central philosophical concern from Plato's suspicion of art as dangerous imitation to contemporary debates about the nature of aest

aesthetics philosophy of art beauty sublime Plato mimesis