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2,668 results for "de officiis" — page 24 of 134
E_4_23 — Magnetic Field Strength History: Dipole Decay and Implications
Earth's magnetic field — generated by convective motion of liquid iron in the outer core (the geodynamo) — is not constant in strength. Over the past ~170 years of direct measurement (since Carl Friedrich Gauss's first s
E_1_07 — Tunguska Event and Modern Impact Evidence
On June 30, 1908, an atmospheric explosion over the Podkamennaya Tunguska River in central Siberia released energy equivalent to approximately 12 megatons of TNT (roughly 1,000 times the Hiroshima bomb), flattening 2,150
E_1_16 — Thera/Santorini Eruption: Detailed Analysis of the Minoan Catastrophe
The eruption of Thera (modern Santorini, Greece) was one of the largest volcanic events in the Holocene — estimated at VEI 6–7 (Volcanic Explosivity Index), ejecting approximately 30–80 km³ of magma (dense rock equivalen
E_5_08 — Justinianic Plague & Late Antique Pandemics
The Justinianic Plague (541–750 CE) was the first historically documented pandemic of bubonic plague caused by Yersinia pestis, striking the Byzantine Empire at the height of Emperor Justinian I's reconquest campaigns. A
E_5_10 — Justinianic Plague: The First Pandemic and the Fall of the Ancient World
The Justinianic Plague (541–750 CE) — the first historically documented pandemic of bubonic plague caused by Yersinia pestis — struck the Byzantine Empire at the height of Emperor Justinian I's attempted reconquest of th
ZG_2_07 — Dead Languages: Extinction, Documentation, and Revival
A dead language is one that no longer has any native speakers — no community transmits it to children as a first language through normal intergenerational communication. Of the approximately 7,000 languages spoken today,
ZG_4_09 — Sociolinguistics: Language, Power, and Social Identity
Sociolinguistics is the study of the relationship between language and society — how social factors (class, gender, ethnicity, age, region, network, situation) systematically shape the way people speak, and conversely, h
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
ZG_4_11 — Forensic Linguistics: Language as Legal Evidence
Forensic linguistics is the application of linguistic knowledge, methods, and analysis to legal contexts — including criminal investigations, courtroom proceedings, legislation, and regulatory disputes. The field encompa
ZG_3_19 — Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis: Modern Evidence
The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis — the idea that the structure of a language influences its speakers' perception and cognition — has undergone a dramatic rehabilitation since the 1990s after decades of near-total rejection in
ZG_3_08 — Morphology: Word Structure, Inflection, and Derivation
Morphology — the branch of linguistics concerned with the internal structure of words — investigates how morphemes (the smallest meaningful units of language) combine to form words. A morpheme may be a free morpheme (can
J_3_09 — Persian Qanats: Underground Water Engineering
The qanat (also karez, kariz, foggara, falaj) is an underground water management system developed in ancient Persia (modern Iran) that represents one of the most sustainable and ingenious hydraulic engineering achievemen
J_3_18 — Ancient Water Management: Qanats, Tank Cascades & Hydraulic Engineering
Water management was among the most critical and sophisticated technologies of the ancient world, with independent innovations emerging across every major civilization. The Persian qanat system — underground gravity-fed
J_1_11 — Antikythera Mechanism and Ancient Computing Devices
The Antikythera Mechanism — recovered in 1901 from a Roman-era shipwreck off the Greek island of Antikythera (dated to c. 70–60 BCE by ceramic and coin evidence; the device itself likely constructed c. 150–100 BCE) — is
J_1_09 — Ancient Automata, Mechanical Devices, and Proto-Robotics
The history of automata — self-operating machines that mimic living beings or perform complex tasks — stretches back thousands of years, demonstrating that mechanical ingenuity is not a modern invention but a recurring f
J_1_14 — Ancient Acoustic Engineering: Sound Design in Sacred Architecture
Ancient builders across multiple civilizations engineered remarkable acoustic properties into their structures — from the whispering gallery effects of circular temples to the precisely calculated seating geometry of Gre
J_2_20 — Zhang Heng's Seismoscope: Ancient Chinese Earthquake Detection
In 132 CE, during the reign of Emperor Shun of Han, the Chinese polymath Zhang Heng (張衡, 78–139 CE) constructed the world's first known instrument for detecting distant earthquakes — the houfeng didong yi (候風地動儀), litera
J_2_07 — Ancient Leather, Parchment, and Hide Technology
Leather and parchment — materials produced by the chemical and physical transformation of animal hides and skins — are among humanity's oldest and most versatile manufactured materials, with evidence of hide processing (
J_5_03 — Islamic Golden Age — Scientific and Technological Achievements
The Islamic Golden Age (roughly 8th-14th century CE) constitutes one of the most productive periods of scientific and technological advancement in human history, centered on the Abbasid caliphate's House of Wisdom (Bayt
Q_1_15 — Dark Energy Models and Quintessence
The accelerating expansion of the universe, discovered in 1998 via Type Ia supernovae, demands an explanation. The simplest model — Einstein's cosmological constant Λ with equation of state $w = p/\rho = -1$ exactly — fi
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