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1,686 results for "Age of Pisces" — page 25 of 85
Y_3_08 — Breathwork and Holotropic States of Consciousness
Deliberate manipulation of breathing patterns to alter consciousness is among the oldest and most widespread human practices, documented in yogic pranayama (circa 500 BCE, Yoga Sutras of Patanjali), Tibetan tummo (inner-
Y_3_03 — Flow States and Peak Performance — Psychology of Optimal Experience
Flow — the state of complete absorption in an activity where self-awareness dissolves and performance peaks — was systematically described by psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi beginning in 1975 and formalized in his l
Y_1_12 — Salvia Divinorum: Mazatec Sage and Kappa-Opioid Visionary
Salvia divinorum ("diviner's sage") is a psychoactive plant of the mint family (Lamiaceae) native to the cloud forests of the Sierra Mazateca in Oaxaca, Mexico, where it has been used for centuries by Mazatec healers and
H_2_20 — Suppression of Anomalous Archaeological Finds
The suppression of anomalous archaeological finds — artifacts, structures, or skeletal remains that challenge established chronological and evolutionary frameworks — is one of the most contentious claims in alternative a
H_2_03 — Academic Gatekeeping, Paradigm Resistance, and the Sociology of Knowledge
Academic gatekeeping — the processes by which scientific communities control which ideas, methods, and practitioners gain legitimacy — is simultaneously essential to quality (filtering out error, fraud, and pseudoscience
H_1_05 — Qin Shi Huang Book Burning and Burying of Scholars (213–212 BCE)
In 213 BCE, Qin Shi Huang — China's first emperor — ordered the burning of books (fenshu 焚書) that contradicted Legalist state ideology, and in 212 BCE reportedly buried alive 460 Confucian scholars (kengru 坑儒) who defied
H_1_01 — Suppression of Ancient Knowledge
This document catalogs the systematic destruction of ancient knowledge, artifacts, texts, and entire religions throughout history — framed both as deliberate suppression of heterodox knowledge (Claude/Gemini/Master persp
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
H_1_14 — Religious Text Sanitization: The Erasure and Editing of Sacred Traditions
Religious text sanitization — the deliberate editing, exclusion, suppression, or reinterpretation of sacred texts by institutional authorities to enforce doctrinal orthodoxy, eliminate heterodox teachings, or adapt tradi
H_3_04 — Destruction of Aboriginal Australian Knowledge Systems
The destruction of Aboriginal Australian knowledge systems represents the disruption of the longest continuous cultural tradition on Earth — spanning at least 65,000 years. From the arrival of the First Fleet in 1788, co
H_3_07 — Suppression of Women's Knowledge and Healing Traditions
Across European and colonial history, women's roles as healers, herbalists, midwives, and knowledge transmitters were systematically marginalized through a combination of religious persecution, medical professionalizatio
H_3_02 — Suppression of Gnostic and Heterodox Christianity
From the earliest centuries of Christianity through the medieval period, a sustained campaign of suppression eliminated dozens of alternative Christian movements, destroying their texts and persecuting their adherents. B
H_4_06 — Suppression of Psychedelic Research (1960s–2000s)
From the late 1940s through the mid-1960s, psychedelic substances — particularly LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) and psilocybin — were the subject of extensive legitimate scientific research, with over 1,000 peer-review
H_4_01 — Propaganda, Information Control, and the Manufacture of Consent
The systematic manipulation of public belief is as old as civilization itself. Egyptian pharaohs chiseled out predecessors' names (damnatio memoriae), Roman emperors staged bread and circuses, and Chinese imperial histor
H_4_10 — Corporate Suppression of Science
One of the most systematic and consequential forms of knowledge suppression in the modern era is the deliberate corporate manufacture of scientific doubt to protect profitable but harmful products. The strategy was pione
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_14 — Hegel: Dialectics, Phenomenology of Spirit, and Historical Reason
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831), the most ambitious and systematic philosopher of the German Idealist tradition, developed a comprehensive philosophical system in which reality, thought, and history are underst
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
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
P_4_18 — African Philosophy: Ubuntu, Sage Tradition, and Ethnophilosophy
African philosophy encompasses a diverse set of intellectual traditions — from pre-colonial oral philosophical systems preserved through proverbs, cosmologies, and sage discourse, through the anti-colonial movements of N
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