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189 results for "Mul Mantar" — page 3 of 10
A_4_29 — Mongolian & Turkic Epic Traditions
The Mongolian and Turkic epic traditions constitute one of the world's great oral literary heritages, spanning from the Altai Mountains to Anatolia across more than two millennia. Central texts include the Secret History
U_5_09 — Video Games as Art and Culture
Video games — interactive digital experiences combining computation, visual art, sound design, narrative, and player agency — have evolved from simple electronic experiments to arguably the dominant cultural medium of th
U_2_19 — Impressionism and Color Theory: Light, Perception, and the Science of Seeing
Impressionism — the most revolutionary art movement of the 19th century — emerged in Paris in the late 1860s–1870s through the work of Claude Monet (1840–1926), Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841–1919), Camille Pissarro (1830–1
U_4_15 — Ritual Objects and Votive Offerings: Material Culture of Devotion
Ritual objects — material things created, consecrated, or used in religious or ceremonial practice — and votive offerings — objects dedicated to a deity, saint, or supernatural power in fulfillment of a vow, in supplicat
U_4_02 — Oral Literature — Epic, Myth, and Memory Before Writing
Before writing systems emerged (~3400 BCE in Sumer), all human knowledge was transmitted orally — through epic recitation, song, ritual chant, and structured narrative. The oral-formulaic theory developed by Milman Parry
X_2_10 — Bioelectromagnetic Medicine — Evidence and Controversy
Bioelectromagnetic medicine occupies an unusual position in the medical landscape — a field in which rigorously validated clinical applications (PEMF for bone healing, TMS for depression) coexist with a vast fringe of un
X_5_18 — Binaural Beats: Auditory Processing, Brainwave Entrainment, and Therapeutic Claims
Binaural beats are an auditory perceptual phenomenon first described by Heinrich Wilhelm Dove in 1839: when two tones of slightly different frequencies are presented separately to each ear (e.g., 400 Hz left, 410 Hz righ
X_5_07 — Neurology: The Clinical Science of the Nervous System
Neurology is the branch of medicine dealing with disorders of the nervous system — the brain, spinal cord, peripheral nerves, and neuromuscular junction. The discipline encompasses some of the most devastating and challe
X_5_25 — Music Therapy: Sound, Rhythm, and Neurological Healing
Music therapy — the clinical and evidence-based use of music interventions by credentialed professionals to accomplish individualized goals within a therapeutic relationship — has emerged from ancient intuition into a mo
X_4_16 — Music Therapy
Music therapy is the evidence-based clinical use of music interventions to accomplish individualized therapeutic goals within a therapeutic relationship, as defined by the American Music Therapy Association (AMTA, founde
X_4_20 — Autoimmune Disease Rise & Hygiene Hypothesis
The dramatic rise of autoimmune and allergic diseases in industrialized nations over the past half-century — while these conditions remain comparatively rare in developing countries — represents one of the most important
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_16 — Allergy & Autoimmune Disease: Immune Dysregulation and Self-Recognition
Allergy and autoimmune disease represent opposite failures of immune discrimination: allergy is an exaggerated immune response to harmless environmental antigens (allergens), while autoimmune disease involves immune atta
INTERDOC_66 — Information Persistence Through Catastrophic Events
Three apparently unrelated phenomena share a deep structural feature:
W_4_02 — Polynesian Navigation and Rapa Nui
The Polynesian settlement of the Pacific Ocean — the largest migration in human prehistory — colonized virtually every inhabitable island across 16 million km² of open ocean using non-instrument navigation techniques of
W_3_01 — Bantu Cosmology, Migration, and Iron Traditions
The Bantu expansion (~3000 BCE–500 CE) is one of the largest and most consequential human migrations in history: speakers of proto-Bantu languages from the Nigeria-Cameroon borderland spread across most of sub-Saharan Af
W_2_10 — Hmong Cosmology, Shamanism, and the Shaman's Journey
The Hmong — a Hmong-Mien-speaking people originating in highland southern China with diaspora communities across Laos, Thailand, Vietnam, and the United States — maintain one of the most elaborate shamanic traditions sur
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_5_14 — Mapuche Civilization: Resistance, Cosmovision, and Araucanian Culture
The Mapuche ("People of the Land") — also historically known by the Spanish term Araucanians — are an indigenous people of south-central Chile and southwestern Argentina who achieved something nearly unique in the histor
ZH_5_18 — Enuma Anu Enlil: Babylonian Celestial Omen Series and Astral Science
The Enuma Anu Enlil ("When Anu and Enlil...") is the most extensive celestial omen series from ancient Mesopotamia — comprising approximately 70 tablets containing some 7,000 omen entries. The series was compiled during
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