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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
785 results for "Bronze Age Collapse" — page 28 of 40
O_5_18 — Subterranean Worlds: Caves, Catacombs, and Underground Heritage
Humanity has a deep and ancient relationship with the underground — from Paleolithic cave sanctuaries decorated 40,000+ years ago, to engineered underground cities capable of sheltering tens of thousands (Derinkuyu, Capp
O_5_17 — Deep Time: Geological Chronology and the Scale of Earth History
Deep time is the concept that Earth's geological history extends across approximately 4.54 billion years — a scale so vast that human civilization occupies less than 0.00001% of it. First articulated by James Hutton in 1
T_4_12 — Radicalization: Pathways to Extremism, Terrorism, and Deradicalization
Radicalization — the process by which individuals adopt increasingly extreme political, social, or religious ideologies that justify violence as a means of achieving group or personal goals — has become one of the most i
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
T_4_01 — Psychology of Belief & Conspiracy Thinking
The psychology of conspiracy thinking examines why individuals adopt beliefs in secret plots by powerful actors to achieve malevolent goals — beliefs that often resist disconfirmation and form interconnected "monological
T_2_02 — Neurodiversity — Cognitive Variation as Adaptive Spectrum
The neurodiversity paradigm, articulated by sociologist Judy Singer in 1998, frames neurological differences—including autism, ADHD, dyslexia, synesthesia, Tourette syndrome, and other developmental conditions—not as pat
T_2_01 — Psychology of Grief, Loss, and Death Awareness
The psychology of grief, loss, and death awareness spans clinical bereavement research, existential psychology, and experimental social cognition. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross's five-stage model (1969), though culturally ubiqui
T_2_13 — Placebo and Nocebo Effects
The placebo effect — a measurable physiological or psychological improvement in response to an inert treatment — is one of the most robust and well-documented phenomena in medicine and psychology, while the nocebo effect
T_1_15 — Schema Theory: Cognitive Frameworks, Scripts, and Knowledge Organization
Schema theory — the idea that the mind organizes knowledge into structured mental frameworks (schemas) that guide perception, memory, and reasoning — is one of the foundational concepts in cognitive psychology, linking w
T_1_05 — Moral Psychology — Haidt, Kohlberg, Moral Foundations
Moral psychology — the empirical study of how humans make moral judgments and develop moral understanding — has undergone a revolution over the past two decades, shifting from Lawrence Kohlberg's rationalist stage theory
T_1_17 — Educational Psychology: Learning, Development, and Instruction
Educational psychology — the scientific study of how humans learn and how instructional environments can be optimized to support learning — integrates cognitive psychology, developmental theory, motivation research, and
T_3_04 — Sleep Psychology and Dreams
Sleep occupies approximately one-third of human life yet its functions remain among the most actively investigated questions in neuroscience and psychology.
T_3_07 — Psychology of Play
Play — voluntary, intrinsically motivated, process-oriented activity distinguished by positive affect, flexibility, and "as-if" pretense — is a universal feature of mammalian development that serves critical functions in
T_3_09 — Psychology of Perception and Illusions
Perception — the process by which the brain interprets sensory information to construct a model of the external world — is not a passive recording but an active, constructive process shaped by expectations, context, and
T_5_04 — Psychology of Religion and Spirituality
The psychology of religion investigates why humans believe in supernatural agents, how religious practices affect cognition and well-being, and what psychological functions religion serves. The field was inaugurated by W
T_5_02 — Psychology of Music
Music psychology investigates how humans perceive, produce, respond emotionally to, and are transformed by music — drawing on cognitive psychology, auditory neuroscience, developmental psychology, and clinical applicatio
T_5_25 — Cognitive Evolution: The Development of Human Mental Capacities
Cognitive evolution — the study of how human mental capacities emerged and developed over evolutionary time — addresses one of the deepest questions in science: how did a lineage of African primates develop language, sym
T_5_18 — Cognitive Science of Religion: How Minds Create Gods
The Cognitive Science of Religion (CSR) is an interdisciplinary field — emerging in the 1990s from cognitive psychology, evolutionary biology, anthropology, and neuroscience — that explains religious beliefs and practice
T_5_01 — Sports Psychology and Performance
Sports psychology investigates the psychological factors that influence athletic performance, exercise behavior, and physical activity — applying principles from cognitive, social, and clinical psychology to optimize hum
D_2_11 — Abu Simbel: Ramesses II and Solar Engineering
Abu Simbel — twin rock-cut temples on the western bank of the Nile in southern Egypt (Nubia), near the modern border with Sudan — represents the apex of pharaonic monumental engineering and one of the most spectacular so
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