RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
731 results for "min min lights" — page 29 of 37
H_3_18 — Digital Information Control and Algorithmic Censorship
The shift from print and broadcast media to digital platforms (c. 2000–present) has created new mechanisms of information control that differ fundamentally from historical censorship. Unlike state censorship, which remov
H_4_05 — Digital Age Censorship and Algorithm Suppression
The digital age has introduced unprecedented mechanisms for information suppression, censorship, and narrative control that operate at global scale and often remain invisible to those affected. This document examines thr
H_4_04 — Soviet Science Suppression — Lysenkoism and Vavilov
The Lysenko affair (1928–1964) represents the most devastating case of ideological suppression of science in the 20th century. Trofim Denisovich Lysenko (1898–1976), an agronomist with minimal formal training, rose to do
H_4_17 — Algorithmic Censorship and AI Content Moderation
Algorithmic content moderation — the use of automated systems (machine learning classifiers, natural language processing, computer vision, and large language models) to detect, flag, restrict, or remove online content —
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
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_19 — Heidegger: Being, Technology, and Dasein
Martin Heidegger (1889–1976), arguably the most influential and controversial philosopher of the 20th century, fundamentally reoriented Western philosophy by arguing that the tradition had "forgotten" the question of Bei
P_3_10 — Skepticism and Pyrrhonism
Skepticism — the philosophical position that knowledge is uncertain, limited, or impossible — is one of the oldest and most persistent currents in philosophy. Ancient Pyrrhonian skepticism (Pyrrho, ~360–270 BCE; Sextus E
P_3_12 — Medieval Philosophy: Aquinas, Ockham, and Scholastic Thought
Medieval philosophy spans roughly a millennium of intellectual activity (c. 5th-15th centuries CE) dominated by the project of integrating faith and reason — reconciling the philosophical heritage of ancient Greece (espe
P_3_20 — Heidegger: Being and Time, Dasein & the Question of Technology
Martin Heidegger (1889–1976) is arguably the most influential and controversial philosopher of the 20th century. His masterwork Sein und Zeit (Being and Time, 1927) revolutionized continental philosophy by reframing the
P_4_06 — Buddhist Philosophy — Dependent Origination, Non-Self, and Emptiness
Buddhist philosophy — developed from the teachings attributed to Siddhārtha Gautama (c. 5th century BCE) and elaborated over 2,500 years across diverse Asian cultures — offers one of the most rigorous philosophical analy
P_4_07 — Confucian Ethics, Filial Piety, and Social Harmony
Confucianism — the ethical, social, and political philosophy developed from the teachings of Kong Qiu (Confucius, 551-479 BCE) — has shaped East Asian civilization more profoundly than perhaps any other single intellectu
P_4_01 — Death and the Afterlife Across Cultures
Every known human culture has developed beliefs about what happens after death — making afterlife cosmology one of the most universal features of human thought. The major frameworks include: judgment and reward/punishmen
P_4_13 — Chinese Philosophy — Dao, Confucius, and Beyond
Chinese philosophy encompasses one of the world's richest and longest-continuous intellectual traditions, spanning from the Zhou dynasty (~1046–256 BCE) to the present. The foundational period — the Hundred Schools of Th
P_4_04 — Art as Knowledge Encoding — Visual, Musical, and Performative Epistemologies
Before writing systems emerged (~3200 BCE), and for most of human history since, art — visual, musical, performative, and material — served as a primary means of encoding, storing, and transmitting knowledge across gener
P_4_10 — Islamic Philosophy — Al-Kindi to Ibn Rushd and Beyond
Islamic philosophy (falsafa) represents one of the great intellectual traditions in human history, flourishing from the 9th through 12th centuries CE and continuing through later thinkers like Mulla Sadra into the modern
P_1_09 — Philosophy of Time
The philosophy of time addresses some of the deepest questions in metaphysics: Is time real or an illusion? Does the present moment have a special ontological status, or are past, present, and future equally real? Does t
P_1_10 — Philosophy of Technology
Philosophy of technology examines the nature, meaning, and ethical implications of technology — not merely as a collection of tools but as a fundamental mode of human existence that shapes perception, values, social rela
P_1_13 — Paradoxes in Philosophy: Zeno, Liar, Ship of Theseus, Sorites
A paradox is an argument that proceeds from apparently acceptable premises via apparently valid reasoning to a conclusion that is apparently unacceptable — forcing us either to reject a premise, identify a flaw in the re
P_1_01 — The Hard Problem of Consciousness
The Hard Problem of Consciousness, defined by philosopher David Chalmers in 1995, asks: Why does physical processing in the brain give rise to subjective experience? We can explain HOW neurons fire (the "easy problems")
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