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2,196 results for "belief as tool" — page 29 of 110
X_3_25 — Antibiotic Resistance Crisis
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) — the ability of microorganisms to survive exposure to drugs that once killed them — is one of the most serious threats to global public health in the twenty-first century. [KEY FINDING] A
X_3_21 — Pulmonology & Respiratory Medicine
Pulmonology encompasses the diagnosis and treatment of disease affecting the respiratory system — from upper airways to alveolar gas exchange. Respiratory diseases collectively represent the third leading cause of death
X_3_03 — Epidemic and Pandemic History
Epidemics and pandemics — the outbreak and widespread transmission of infectious disease — have shaped human civilization as profoundly as wars, technologies, and ideas. Ancient: the Plague of Athens (430 BCE, described
X_3_14 — Cardiology: The Science of the Heart
Cardiology — the branch of medicine dealing with disorders of the heart and cardiovascular system — addresses the leading cause of death worldwide: cardiovascular disease (CVD), responsible for ~17.9 million deaths per y
W_1_15 — Elamite Civilization: Susa, Proto-Writing, and Indo-Iranian Bridge
Elam — one of the oldest civilizations in the world, contemporary with and frequently interacting with Sumer, Akkad, and Babylonia — flourished in southwestern Iran (primarily the lowland plain of Khuzestan and the highl
W_1_21 — Minoan Civilization: Detailed Analysis
The Minoan civilization of Crete (c. 2700–1450 BCE) was the first advanced civilization in Europe and one of the most remarkable cultures of the Bronze Age Mediterranean. Named by archaeologist Sir Arthur Evans (1851–194
W_2_24 — Chola Empire
The Chola Empire (c. 300 BCE – 1279 CE), with its imperial zenith under Rajaraja I (r. 985–1014 CE) and Rajendra I (r. 1014–1044 CE), was the most powerful naval and territorial state in medieval South and Southeast Asia
W_2_21 — The Khmer Empire and Angkor
The Khmer Empire (~802–1431 CE), centered in present-day Cambodia, was one of the most powerful and spatially extensive states in Southeast Asian history, and its capital Angkor was the largest preindustrial city on Eart
W_2_17 — Khmer Empire & Angkor Hydraulics
The Khmer Empire (c. 802–1431 CE), centered in modern Cambodia, was one of the most powerful and technologically sophisticated states in Southeast Asian history. Its capital, Greater Angkor, covered approximately 1,000 k
W_2_23 — Pyu City-States
The Pyu city-states (c. 200 BCE – 1050 CE) were the earliest urbanized polities in mainland Southeast Asia, located in the dry zone and Irrawaddy River valley of modern Myanmar (Burma). Three major walled cities — Beikth
W_2_13 — Sogdian Civilization: Silk Road Merchants and Cultural Brokers
The Sogdians — an Eastern Iranian people centered in the fertile valleys of the Zerafshan and Kashkadarya rivers (modern Uzbekistan and Tajikistan — the cities of Samarkand and Bukhara) — were the quintessential merchant
W_2_12 — Khmer Empire Beyond Angkor: Jayavarman, Hydraulics, and Collapse
The Khmer Empire (c. 802–1431 CE) — centered in present-day Cambodia and extending across much of mainland Southeast Asia — was one of the most powerful and sophisticated civilizations in world history, yet its true scal
W_2_16 — Srivijaya Maritime Empire
Srivijaya (c. 650–1377 CE) was a Malay Buddhist thalassocracy centered on the island of Sumatra (modern Indonesia) that dominated maritime trade across the Strait of Malacca and the South China Sea for over 500 years. At
W_5_17 — Göktürk Khaganate
The Göktürk (Old Turkic: 𐰜𐰇𐰛:𐱅𐰇𐰼𐰰, Kök Türk, "Celestial Turks") Khaganate (552–744 CE) was the first major Turkic-speaking empire to unite the Central Asian steppe, stretching at its height from Manchuria to the Black Se
W_5_33 — Khazar Khaganate: Turkic Empire and Religious Conversion
The Khazar Khaganate (c. 650–1048 CE) was a major Turkic empire that dominated the steppe and steppe-forest region between the Caspian Sea, the Black Sea, the Caucasus Mountains, and the Volga River — controlling key seg
W_5_22 — Uyghur Khaganate
The Uyghur Khaganate (744–840 CE) was a Turkic steppe empire centered in the Orkhon Valley (modern Mongolia) that fundamentally challenged the stereotype of nomadic empires as purely pastoral and destructive. Under Bögü
ZH_4_08 — Lunar Calendars: Tracking the Moon Across Cultures
Lunar calendars — systems of timekeeping governed by the synodic month (the ~29.53-day cycle from new moon to new moon) — represent humanity's oldest systematic method of measuring time. Evidence from the Lascaux cave pa
ZH_4_18 — Indigenous Star Map Catalog
Indigenous star map systems — the astronomical knowledge embedded in the oral traditions, navigation practices, ceremonial calendars, and landscape relationships of non-Western cultures — represent a vast but systematica
ZH_4_15 — Milky Way Mythology: Cultural Interpretations of the Galaxy Worldwide
The Milky Way — the luminous band of light stretching across the night sky, now understood as the disk of our home galaxy seen edge-on from within — has been one of humanity's most universally observed and mythologized c
ZH_4_17 — Supernova Records Cross-Validation: Historical Observations and Modern Remnant Identification
Historical supernova observations — "guest stars" (kè xīng, 客星) recorded in Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Arabic, and European sources — provide a unique dataset for cross-validating astrophysical models of supernova remnan
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