RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
2,398 results for "System 1" — page 3 of 120
S_1_08 — Blockchain and Decentralized Systems
Blockchain is a distributed, append-only data structure in which transactions are grouped into blocks, cryptographically linked in sequence, and validated by a decentralized network of nodes using a consensus mechanism —
V_1_05 — Ancient Number Systems & Gematria
Every literate civilization developed a number system, and the diversity of these systems reveals both universal mathematical needs and culturally specific solutions.
V_4_13 — Mathematics of Voting: Arrow's Theorem, Fairness, and Electoral Systems
The mathematics of voting — a branch of social choice theory — applies rigorous mathematical analysis to the problem of aggregating individual preferences into collective decisions, revealing deep impossibility results t
M_5_11 — Archaeological Anomalies Database: Cataloging the Unexplained
This document serves as a structured database and classification system for archaeological anomalies — finds that appear to challenge accepted timelines, technological capabilities, or historical frameworks. Rather than
M_3_11 — Paleolithic Calendars: Marshack's Lunar Notation Hypothesis
In 1972, science journalist Alexander Marshack published The Roots of Civilization, arguing that series of marks engraved on Upper Paleolithic bone and antler artifacts — previously dismissed as random decorations or sim
X_3_02 — Vaccination and Immunology History
Vaccination — the deliberate stimulation of adaptive immune responses using weakened, killed, or component pathogens to provide protection against infectious disease — is among the most consequential medical intervention
W_5_24 — Civilization Collapse & Systems Fragility
Civilizational collapse — the rapid, significant decline of a complex society's political, economic, and social institutions — is a recurring pattern in human history. Major examples include the Western Roman Empire (476
ZH_5_20 — Maya Calendar Systems: Cycles of Time and Cosmic Order
The Maya calendar system represents one of the most sophisticated timekeeping frameworks developed by any civilization, integrating multiple interlocking cycles to track sacred, civil, agricultural, and cosmic time over
K_1_13 — Enactivism: Consciousness Through Action and Interaction
Enactivism is a radical approach to cognition and consciousness that rejects the traditional computational model of the mind (the brain as information-processing computer operating on internal representations of the exte
E_3_07 — Late Bronze Age Collapse
The Late Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1200–1150 BCE) was one of the most dramatic civilizational catastrophes in human history — a cascade of destructions, abandonments, and systemic failures that ended the interconnected pal
ZB_3_17 — Invasive Species Ecology and Biological Invasions
Biological invasions — the introduction, establishment, spread, and impact of species outside their native range — are among the most significant drivers of global biodiversity loss, ecosystem change, and economic damage
G_3_16 — Complexity Theory and Civilizational Collapse
Complexity theory — drawn from physics, mathematics, ecology, and information theory — provides a powerful framework for understanding why civilizations collapse: not as the result of a single catastrophic event, but as
G_2_04 — Complexity Economics and Ancient Trade Systems
Complexity economics — the application of complex systems theory, non-linear dynamics, and agent-based modeling to economic phenomena — provides a powerful modern framework for understanding ancient and premodern trade s
O_3_08 — Subterranean Rivers and Underground Water Systems
Subterranean rivers and underground water systems represent one of Earth's most extensive yet least visible hydrological features — approximately 30% of the world's freshwater (excluding ice caps) exists as groundwater,
T_3_06 — Psychology of Decision Making
The psychology of decision making — transformed by Kahneman & Tversky's heuristics and biases program (1970s) and formalized in prospect theory (1979, Nobel Prize in Economics 2002) — demonstrates that human judgment and
ZD_3_04 — Operating Systems and Concurrency
Operating systems (OS) — the software layer managing hardware resources and providing abstractions for applications — are among the most complex software artifacts ever built. They manage process scheduling (deciding whi
ZD_3_03 — Distributed Systems and Consensus
Distributed systems — collections of independent computers that appear to users as a single coherent system — are fundamental to modern computing infrastructure: the internet, cloud computing, databases, blockchain, and
ZD_3_13 — Cloud Computing: Virtualization, Services, and Distributed Infrastructure
Cloud computing is the delivery of computing resources — servers, storage, databases, networking, software, analytics, and intelligence — over the Internet ("the cloud") on a pay-as-you-go basis, transforming computing f
ZD_5_18 — Complexity Science: The Santa Fe Institute and the Science of Emergence
Complexity science — the interdisciplinary study of systems composed of many interacting components whose collective behavior cannot be predicted from individual parts — emerged as a distinct field in the 1980s, catalyze
ZD_5_19 — Stochastic Resonance: When Noise Enhances Signal
Stochastic resonance (SR) is the counterintuitive phenomenon whereby adding noise to a nonlinear system enhances its ability to detect weak signals — directly contradicting the classical engineering intuition that noise
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