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1,346 results for "method of loci" — page 26 of 68
K_3_16 — Anesthesia and Consciousness: What Going Under Reveals
General anesthesia provides a unique experimental window into consciousness: the ability to reversibly abolish and restore awareness in a controlled clinical setting. Despite over 175 years of practice since William T.G.
K_3_08 — Intention, Volition, and Motor Consciousness
The neural basis of voluntary action and the timing of conscious intention relative to brain activity has become one of the most productive — and philosophically consequential — research programs in consciousness studies
K_3_11 — Animal Consciousness and Sentience
The question of whether non-human animals possess conscious experience — subjective awareness, felt pain, emotions, and self-recognition — has moved from philosophical speculation to a major neuroscientific research prog
K_3_04 — Anesthesia and Consciousness
General anesthesia — the reversible, drug-induced abolition of consciousness — is one of medicine's greatest achievements and, paradoxically, one of its least understood. Approximately 350 million surgical procedures per
K_3_03 — Memory and Consciousness
Memory and consciousness are deeply intertwined — memory provides the continuity of experience that creates a sense of self persisting through time, while consciousness provides the subjective context within which memori
K_1_09 — Philosophical Zombies and the Hard Problem
The philosophical zombie (p-zombie) thought experiment, formalized by David Chalmers (1996), asks: Could there exist a being physically and functionally identical to a conscious human — identical atom for atom, processin
K_4_18 — Near-Death Experiences: Evidence, Neuroscience, and the Consciousness Debate
Near-death experiences (NDEs) are complex subjective experiences reported by approximately 10–20% of cardiac arrest survivors, characterized by feelings of peace, tunnel vision, life review, encounters with deceased pers
Y_1_02 — Morphic Resonance and Sheldrake's Hypothesis
Morphic resonance is a hypothesis proposed by biologist Rupert Sheldrake (b. 1942, Cambridge-trained plant physiologist) that proposes nature operates by habits, not fixed laws, and that organisms and systems are influen
K_4_12 — Noosphere — Teilhard de Chardin, Vernadsky, and the Thinking Layer
The noosphere ("sphere of mind") is a concept developed independently by Russian geochemist Vladimir Vernadsky and French paleontologist-priest Pierre Teilhard de Chardin in the 1920s, describing a layer of collective hu
K_4_15 — Shared Death Experiences
Shared death experiences (SDEs) are reported phenomena in which a person who is physically healthy — typically a family member, caregiver, or bystander present at a death — describes experiencing some or all of the featu
K_4_21 — Quantum Approaches to Consciousness: A Rigorous Assessment
The hypothesis that consciousness depends on quantum-mechanical processes — most prominently in the Penrose-Hameroff Orchestrated Objective Reduction (Orch-OR) model — is one of the most polarizing claims in cognitive sc
K_4_09 — Consciousness, Virtual Reality, and Simulated Environments
Virtual reality (VR) has become one of the most powerful tools for investigating the construction of conscious experience — particularly body ownership, self-location, embodiment, spatial presence, and the boundaries of
K_2_11 — Default Mode Network: Brain at Rest and Self-Referential Consciousness
The Default Mode Network (DMN) is a large-scale brain network that is most active when a person is not focused on the external environment — during mind-wandering, daydreaming, self-referential thought, autobiographical
K_2_09 — Neuroscience of Free Will
The neuroscience of free will centers on experiments testing whether conscious intention precedes or follows the neural preparation for action. Benjamin Libet's landmark 1983 experiments showed that the brain's "readines
K_2_08 — The Binding Problem in Consciousness
The binding problem asks how the brain creates unified, coherent conscious experiences from the distributed, specialized processing activity of millions of neurons across separate brain regions. When you see a red ball r
K_5_06 — Dreaming and Consciousness: Why We Dream
Dreaming — the experience of structured hallucinatory consciousness during sleep — is one of the most remarkable features of the human mind and a central challenge for any theory of consciousness. Every night, for a tota
K_5_08 — Metacognition: Thinking About Thinking
Metacognition — literally "cognition about cognition" or "thinking about thinking" — refers to the human capacity to monitor, evaluate, and regulate one's own cognitive processes. When you realize you don't understand a
K_5_16 — Language, Inner Speech & Consciousness
The relationship between language and consciousness is one of the oldest problems in philosophy of mind and one of the most active frontiers of cognitive neuroscience. The central question — whether conscious thought req
K_5_01 — Neurophenomenology and First-Person Science
Neurophenomenology — the research program proposed by Francisco Varela (1996) — seeks to bridge the "explanatory gap" between objective neuroscience and subjective experience by integrating rigorous first-person phenomen
E_3_09 — Messinian Salinity Crisis
The Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC) — approximately 5.96–5.33 million years ago (late Miocene) — was one of the most dramatic geological events in the Cenozoic: the near-complete desiccation (drying up) of the Mediterran
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