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1,981 results for "the Hum" — page 3 of 100
T_5_25 — Cognitive Evolution: The Development of Human Mental Capacities
Cognitive evolution — the study of how human mental capacities emerged and developed over evolutionary time — addresses one of the deepest questions in science: how did a lineage of African primates develop language, sym
B_5_02 — Shape-Shifting, Therianthropy, and Human-Animal Transformation
The belief that humans can transform into animals — and that some beings exist in hybrid human-animal forms — is one of the oldest and most widespread motifs in human culture. The famous "Lion-Man" of Hohlenstein-Stadel
ZE_5_11 — Moral Relativism vs. Universalism: Cross-Cultural Moral Disagreement
The debate between moral relativism and moral universalism is among the most fundamental in ethics. Relativism holds that moral judgments are valid only relative to a cultural, historical, or individual framework — there
R_2_01 — Human Brain Evolution and the Cognitive Revolution
The human brain tripled in size over 3 million years — from ~400 cm³ (Australopithecus) to ~1,400 cm³ (modern Homo sapiens). This is the most dramatic encephalization in the history of life, and NO consensus exists on wh
S_1_02 — The Singularity and Transhumanism
The Singularity hypothesis proposes that technological progress will reach a point — estimated by Ray Kurzweil at approximately 2045 — where artificial superintelligence triggers runaway growth, fundamentally and irrever
M_5_22 — Mesolithic Europe: Hunter-Gatherer Complexity Before Agriculture
The Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age, ~10,000–5000 BCE in Europe) — the period between the end of the last Ice Age and the arrival of farming — has been traditionally treated as a brief, uninteresting interlude between the d
M_4_16 — Sundaland & Southeast Asian Lost Continent Hypothesis
Sundaland is the geological term for the exposed continental shelf of Southeast Asia that connected the present-day islands of Borneo, Java, Sumatra, and the Malay Peninsula into a single landmass during the Last Glacial
M_2_17 — Sphinx Water Erosion Hypothesis — Schoch Debate
The Sphinx water erosion hypothesis (WEH) — the geological argument that the Great Sphinx of Giza and its enclosure show erosion patterns consistent with prolonged rainfall rather than wind-blown sand, potentially indica
A_2_17 — Chaldean Oracles: Theurgic Fire and the Divine Intellect
The Chaldean Oracles (Logia tōn Chaldaiōn) are a collection of hexameter verses composed in the late 2nd century CE — traditionally attributed to Julian the Chaldean and/or his son Julian the Theurgist during the reign o
A_3_08 — Celtic Mythology and Druidic Tradition
Celtic mythology encompasses the religious narratives, cosmological concepts, and heroic legends of the Celtic-speaking peoples who dominated much of western and central Europe from the Hallstatt period (c. 800 BCE) thro
U_1_22 — Music Therapy Neuroscience
Music therapy neuroscience investigates the neural mechanisms by which music influences brain function, emotion, movement, and cognition — and applies these findings to treat neurological, psychiatric, and developmental
U_1_10 — Theatre History: From Greek Tragedy to Global Performance
Theatre — the live performance of dramatic narrative by actors before an audience — is among the oldest and most enduring human art forms, arising independently in multiple civilizations and undergoing continuous reinven
U_3_15 — Religious Iconography Systems: Visual Theology Across Civilizations
Religious iconography — the visual systems through which religious traditions communicate theological concepts, sacred narratives, ritual knowledge, and cosmological frameworks — is among the most vast and culturally com
U_5_07 — Art Therapy and Healing Through Art
Art therapy — the clinical use of art-making within a therapeutic relationship to improve psychological well-being — and the broader phenomenon of healing through creative expression bridge the domains of art, psychology
U_5_18 — Fractals in Art, Music & Mathematical Aesthetics
Fractal geometry is deeply woven into the fabric of human aesthetic experience across cultures and millennia — not as ornament, but as structure. Richard Taylor (University of Oregon) discovered in 1999 that Jackson Poll
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_2_15 — Art and Mathematics: Escher, Perspective, and Golden Ratio in Practice
The relationship between art and mathematics is one of the oldest and richest intersections in human intellectual history — from the geometric patterns of Islamic tile work and the proportional systems of ancient Greek s
U_4_06 — Architecture as Sacred Art — Cathedrals, Mosques, Temples
Sacred architecture represents humanity's most ambitious attempt to materialize the divine in built form — encoding theological doctrines, cosmological models, mathematical principles, and ritual programs into stone, woo
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_5_13 — Bioethics of Human Experimentation: From Nuremberg to Informed Consent
The bioethics of human experimentation traces the long, often harrowing history of how humans have been used as subjects in medical and scientific research — and the ethical, legal, and institutional frameworks developed
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