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728 results for "precessional age" — page 29 of 37
Y_1_08 — Cannabis: History, Ethnobotany, and Pharmacology
Cannabis (Cannabis sativa L.) is one of humanity's oldest cultivated plants, with a relationship spanning at least 12,000 years based on archaeological evidence. Its use as fiber (hemp), food (seeds), medicine, and psych
H_2_10 — Archaeological Nationalism: Weaponizing the Past
Archaeological nationalism is the systematic appropriation of archaeological evidence, historical narratives, and cultural heritage to serve nationalist political agendas — constructing, validating, or legitimizing claim
H_2_14 — Funding Bias in Science: Who Pays, Who Decides, What Gets Studied
Scientific research is shaped not only by curiosity and methodology but by who funds it — and funders' priorities, interests, and incentive structures systematically influence what questions get asked, what methods are u
H_1_16 — UFO Crash Retrieval Testimony Catalog
The history of alleged UFO crash retrieval operations — in which governments or military agencies are claimed to have recovered physical wreckage and, in some accounts, occupants from downed unidentified aerial phenomena
H_1_11 — Chinese Cultural Revolution — Destruction of the Four Olds
The Chinese Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) unleashed one of history's most devastating campaigns of deliberate cultural destruction. Launched by Mao Zedong to reassert ideological control and purge perceived enemies, th
H_3_01 — Indigenous Knowledge Suppression — Colonialism and Epistemicide
Epistemicide — the systematic destruction of rival knowledge systems — is arguably the most devastating and least acknowledged consequence of global colonialism. Between 1492 and 1950, European colonial powers destroyed,
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_06 — Linguistic Extinction and Lost Knowledge Systems
Of the approximately 7,000 languages spoken today, linguists estimate
H_3_08 — Ethnobotanical Knowledge Loss and Biocultural Extinction
An estimated 80% of the world's population relies at least partially on traditional plant-based medicine (WHO estimate), and approximately 25% of modern pharmaceutical drugs are derived from or inspired by compounds firs
H_4_07 — History of Archaeology: From Antiquarianism to Modern Science
Archaeology as a discipline evolved from Renaissance-era antiquarian curiosity through Enlightenment collecting into a rigorous, methodologically grounded science. Key turning points include Thomsen's Three-Age System (1
H_4_09 — Whistleblower Persecution and Institutional Retaliation
Throughout history, individuals who expose institutional wrongdoing — government illegality, corporate fraud, scientific misconduct, military atrocities — have faced severe retaliation despite acting in the public intere
H_4_23 — State Secrets and Archaeological Blackouts: Restricted Sites
Across the world, archaeological sites, historical monuments, and culturally significant locations are partially or wholly restricted from scholarly access and public knowledge due to military occupation, government secr
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_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_17 — Artificial Intelligence and the Consciousness Question
The question of whether artificial systems can possess consciousness — genuine subjective experience, phenomenal awareness, or "something it is like" to be that system (Thomas Nagel, 1974) — has moved from philosophical
P_1_15 — Philosophy of Information: Floridi, Digital Ethics, and the Infosphere
The philosophy of information (PI) is a relatively young branch of philosophy that investigates the conceptual nature and basic principles of information, including its dynamics (computation, information flow), its utili
P_1_05 — Gödel's Incompleteness and Limits of Knowledge
In 1931, Kurt Gödel proved two theorems that shattered the foundations of mathematics and permanently altered humanity's understanding of knowledge, truth, and proof. The FIRST INCOMPLETENESS THEOREM states: in any consi
P_1_04 — Free Will: Determinism, Compatibilism, and Libertarianism
The free will debate is central to the meaning of human existence: Are we the authors of our choices, or is every decision the inevitable consequence of prior causes? Three major positions dominate: (1) Hard determinism
P_1_08 — Philosophy of Mind and the Body Problem
The mind-body problem — how do mental states (thoughts, feelings, consciousness) relate to physical states (neurons, brains, bodies)? — is one of the oldest and most intractable problems in philosophy. Descartes (1641) f
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