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99 results for "working memory" — page 3 of 5
X_1_11 — Homeopathy: History and Controversy
Homeopathy — a medical system founded by German physician Samuel Hahnemann (1755–1843) based on the principle of similia similibus curentur ("like cures like") — holds that substances causing symptoms in healthy people c
INTERDOC_71 — The NDE Paradox: Consciousness Without Neural Activity & Substrate Independence
The near-death experience (NDE) paradox is the question of whether subjective phenomenology reported during cardiac arrest reflects (a) post-hoc reconstruction during recovery, (b) hidden residual neural activity not cap
INTERDOC_66 — Information Persistence Through Catastrophic Events
Three apparently unrelated phenomena share a deep structural feature:
W_4_06 — Dreamtime Songlines and Aboriginal Navigation
Songlines (also called dreaming tracks or song paths) are one of humanity's most extraordinary intellectual achievements — a vast network of songs that simultaneously encode mythological narrative, geographic navigation
C_4_03 — Yoruba Ogun and Divine Smiths Across Cultures
Every major culture on Earth attributes the invention of metalworking to a divine or supernatural being — a pattern so universal it must reflect something fundamental about the human relationship with metallurgy. The Yor
C_4_05 — Australian Aboriginal Dreamtime Synthesis
This document examines Australian Aboriginal Dreamtime Synthesis, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include The Deep Time Record, Diversity — Not "A Culture" but a Continent o
C_3_01 — Global Flood Stories
Over 500 independent flood traditions exist worldwide, spanning Mesopotamian, Biblical, Hindu, Chinese, Greek, Aboriginal, Mesoamerican, and dozens of other cultures. The oldest written accounts — the Sumerian Eridu Gene
C_2_05 — India Naga Traditions (Comprehensive Dossier)
This document examines India Naga Traditions (Comprehensive Dossier), a topic within the Global Traditions research area. The analysis spans topics including ** Naga, Nāga, Shesha, Vasuki, Takshaka. Notable findings incl
Z_2_23 — Immune System & Immunology
The immune system is a multi-layered defense network that protects organisms against pathogens including bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites. It comprises two interconnected arms: innate immunity, which provides rapi
K_3_05 — Extended Mind and Cognitive Extension
The extended mind thesis (EMT), proposed by Andy Clark and David Chalmers in their landmark 1998 paper "The Extended Mind," argues that cognitive processes need not be confined within the skull — external objects, tools,
Y_1_02 — Morphic Resonance and Sheldrake's Hypothesis
Morphic resonance is a hypothesis proposed by biologist Rupert Sheldrake (b. 1942, Cambridge-trained plant physiologist) that proposes nature operates by habits, not fixed laws, and that organisms and systems are influen
K_4_20 — Non-Neural Learning: Slime Molds, Plants, Bacterial Adaptation
Learning — modifying behavior based on experience — was long thought to require a nervous system. The last twenty years of basal-cognition research have empirically falsified this assumption. Single-celled slime molds (P
K_2_05 — Unconscious Processing
The cognitive unconscious — mental processes that influence behavior, emotion, and decision-making without reaching conscious awareness — is one of the most empirically robust phenomena in psychology and neuroscience. Fa
K_2_20 — Savant Syndrome — Neuroscience of Extraordinary Ability
Savant syndrome — the coexistence of extraordinary ability in a specific domain with significant cognitive disability or neurodevelopmental condition — was first described medically by J. Langdon Down (the physician who
K_2_11 — Default Mode Network: Brain at Rest and Self-Referential Consciousness
The Default Mode Network (DMN) is a large-scale brain network that is most active when a person is not focused on the external environment — during mind-wandering, daydreaming, self-referential thought, autobiographical
K_5_04 — Neuroscience of Belief
Belief — the mental state of holding something to be true — is a cornerstone of conscious experience, shaping perception, memory, emotion, decision-making, and behavior. The neuroscience of belief has revealed that belie
K_5_08 — Metacognition: Thinking About Thinking
Metacognition — literally "cognition about cognition" or "thinking about thinking" — refers to the human capacity to monitor, evaluate, and regulate one's own cognitive processes. When you realize you don't understand a
INTERDOC_53 — Substrate-Independent Information Patterns: Empirical Cases
A pattern is empirically substrate-independent if the same information content is preserved across changes in the physical material carrying it. Across multiple domains, biology and physics provide concrete instances of
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_19 — Cosmic Impact, Mythology, and Cultural Memory
[KEY FINDING] The Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis (YDIH) — first proposed by Richard Firestone, Allen West, and Simon Warwick-Smith (2006–2007) — argues that a cosmic impact or airburst event ~12,800 BP triggered the You
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