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Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
916 results for "cult psychology" — page 3 of 46
C_3_11 — Sacred Sexuality, Hieros Gamos, and Fertility Cults
Sacred sexuality — the ritual enactment of sexual union as a cosmologically generative act — represents one of the most widespread and most misunderstood categories of ancient religious practice. The Sumerian hieros gamo
C_2_14 — Rainbow Serpent Across Cultures: A Cross-Cultural Comparative Analysis
The Rainbow Serpent is arguably the most geographically widespread and temporally deep mythological motif in human culture, appearing as a primordial water/creation deity across Australian Aboriginal traditions (where ro
K_4_16 — Psi Research Meta-Analysis: Parapsychology, Statistical Evidence, and the Replication Debate
Parapsychology — the scientific study of purported psychic phenomena (psi), including telepathy, clairvoyance, precognition, and psychokinesis — has accumulated over a century of experimental research with a complex and
K_4_06 — Collective Trauma, Cultural Memory, and Intergenerational Transmission
Collective trauma — the psychological impact of catastrophic events on entire communities, nations, or peoples — and its intergenerational transmission across generations is one of the most important intersections of psy
E_3_12 — Agriculture: Origins, Spread, and Civilizational Impact
Agriculture — the deliberate cultivation of plants and domestication of animals for food, fiber, and other products — is arguably the single most consequential technological and social transformation in human history, se
ZG_4_20 — Sign Language Linguistics & Deaf Culture
Sign languages are fully developed natural languages with complete phonological, morphological, syntactic, and semantic systems — not manual codes for spoken languages, not pantomime, and not universal. There are over 30
J_4_05 — Ancient Agricultural Technology
The technological systems that transformed wild plant gathering into controlled food production — agriculture — represent the most consequential technological revolution in human history, enabling sedentism, population g
J_4_14 — Ancient Beekeeping & Apiculture Technology
Beekeeping (apiculture) ranks among humanity's oldest managed food-production technologies, with evidence of human-bee relationships extending back at least 9,000 years. Rock art in the Cueva de la Araña (Spider Cave) ne
J_4_03 — Ancient Food Technology — Fermentation, Preservation, and Agriculture
Ancient food technology encompassed far more than simple subsistence — it involved sophisticated biochemistry (fermentation, enzymatic breakdown), engineering (bread ovens, fish sauce factories), and ecological managemen
INTERDOC_59 — Intergenerational Trauma: A Three-Channel Synthesis (Epigenetic, Psychological, Cultural)
Trauma is empirically heritable — but not through any single mechanism. The dominant public framing (epigenetics-as-Lamarckism) is overconfident; the dominant academic counter-framing (it's all attachment / it's all cult
INTERDOC_22 — Near-Death Experience, Afterlife Belief, and Cross-Cultural Evidence
[KEY FINDING] The AWARE (AWAreness during REsuscitation) study — a four-year prospective study across 15 hospitals in the UK, US, and Austria, led by Sam Parnia (published 2014, Resuscitation) — found that 39% of 140 car
INTERDOC_64 — Cross-Cultural Constellations: Independent Invention vs. Diffusion as a Knowledge-Transmission Probe
The 88 modern IAU constellations are a cultural product — 48 from Ptolemy (~150 CE, derived from Mesopotamian/Babylonian sources), 12 from Keyser and de Houtman (~1596, Dutch East Indies), and 28 filled in by 17th–18th c
ZC_3_04 — Sociology of Food and Agriculture
Sociology of food examines food as a social phenomenon — how production, distribution, preparation, and consumption are shaped by power, culture, class, gender, and global economic structures. Sidney Mintz (Sweetness and
ZC_5_13 — Linguistic Anthropology: Language, Culture, and Sapir-Whorf
Linguistic anthropology — one of the four traditional subfields of American anthropology (alongside cultural, biological/physical, and archaeological anthropology) — studies the relationships between language and social
ZC_1_19 — Moral Psychology
Moral psychology — the scientific study of how humans develop, experience, and exercise moral judgment — has undergone a revolution since the early 2000s, shifting from Lawrence Kohlberg's rationalist stage theory (1958–
ZC_1_10 — Environmental Psychology
Environmental psychology examines the transactions between individuals and their physical surroundings — how built and natural environments influence human behavior, cognition, emotion, and well-being, and reciprocally,
ZC_1_05 — Psychology of Religion & Spiritual Experience
The psychology of religion — the empirical study of religious and spiritual experience, belief, and behavior — was inaugurated by William James's The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902), which established that relig
ZC_1_14 — Social Media Psychology
Social media usage is now near-universal among adolescents and young adults in developed nations (95% of US teens, Pew 2023), making its psychological effects one of the most debated topics in contemporary psychology. Th
ZC_4_19 — Disaster Resilience Anthropology: Cultural Adaptation to Catastrophe
Disaster anthropology — the study of how human societies prepare for, experience, respond to, and recover from catastrophic events — emerged as a distinct subfield through the work of Anthony Oliver-Smith (University of
ZC_4_17 — Food Anthropology: Culture, Identity, and Power at the Table
Food anthropology examines how the production, preparation, distribution, and consumption of food encode cultural meaning, reinforce social hierarchies, and express identity. Claude Lévi-Strauss proposed the "culinary tr
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