RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
615 results for "consciousness evolution" — page 30 of 31
ZE_3_00 — Bioethics Technology: Subfolder Summary
ZE_1_00 — Western Ethical Traditions: Subfolder Summary
R_4_11 — Regeneration: Axolotl, Planaria, Hydra, and Limb Regrowth
Regeneration — the ability of an organism to regrow lost or damaged body parts — ranges from the routine (skin healing, liver regrowth in humans) to the spectacular: the axolotl (Mexican salamander) can regrow entire lim
R_4_16 — Magnetoreception: Biological Magnetic Sensing
Magnetoreception — the ability of organisms to detect Earth's magnetic field and use it for orientation and navigation — is one of the most enigmatic sensory modalities in biology, documented in diverse taxa including mi
R_4_00 — Organismal Systems: Subfolder Summary
R_3_08 — Speciation Mechanisms and Reproductive Isolation
Speciation — the process by which one species splits into two or more reproductively isolated lineages — is the engine of biodiversity. Ernst Mayr's biological species concept (1942) defines species as groups of interbre
R_3_07 — Embryology and Morphogenesis: How Bodies Take Shape
Embryology — the study of how a single fertilized cell becomes a complex multicellular organism — is one of biology's most profound mysteries. From the discovery by Karl Ernst von Baer (1828) that embryos of different sp
R_3_01 — Epigenetics and Ancestral Memory
Epigenetics — heritable changes in gene expression WITHOUT changes to the DNA sequence — has revolutionized biology over the past two decades. Your genes are the hardware; epigenetics is the software that determines whic
R_3_02 — Horizontal Gene Transfer in Complex Life
For decades, the "tree of life" was the central metaphor of evolutionary biology — species branching neatly from common ancestors through vertical gene transmission (parent to offspring). This metaphor is now BROKEN, at
R_3_06 — Altruism and Cooperation in Nature
Altruism — behavior that reduces the actor's fitness while increasing the recipient's — presents a fundamental puzzle for evolutionary theory: how can natural selection favor genes that reduce their bearer's reproduction
R_3_00 — Mechanisms Genetics: Subfolder Summary
R_3_09 — Molecular Phylogenetics and Tree of Life
Molecular phylogenetics — reconstructing evolutionary relationships from DNA, RNA, and protein sequences — has revolutionized our understanding of the tree of life since Carl Woese's landmark 1977 discovery, using small-
R_5_09 — Color in Nature: Structural Color, Pigmentation, and Signaling
Color in nature serves functions spanning camouflage, warning, mate attraction, thermoregulation, and protection from UV radiation — produced through two fundamentally different mechanisms: pigmentary color (selective ab
R_5_20 — Mass Extinction Recovery: Post-Crisis Adaptive Radiation
Life on Earth has survived at least five major mass extinctions — the "Big Five" — each eliminating 75–96% of species. Yet each catastrophe was followed by a remarkable recovery phase in which surviving lineages radiated
R_5_13 — Biological Invasions: Introduced Species and Ecosystem Disruption
Biological invasions — the introduction and spread of species beyond their native range, typically aided by human activity — represent one of the top five drivers of global biodiversity loss, alongside habitat destructio
R_5_08 — Human Microbiome: Gut Ecology and Symbiotic Partnerships
The human microbiome — the vast community of trillions of microorganisms (bacteria, archaea, fungi, viruses) that inhabit the human body, primarily the gastrointestinal tract — is now recognized as a critical organ-like
R_5_11 — Coral Biology: Symbiosis, Bleaching, and Reef Building
Coral reefs — often called the "rainforests of the sea" — are among Earth's most biodiverse and productive ecosystems, occupying less than 0.1% of the ocean floor yet supporting approximately 25% of all marine species. T
R_5_12 — Deep-Sea Biology: Hadal Zone Life, Pressure, and Extreme Organisms
The deep sea — defined as depths below 200 meters (the photic zone boundary) — constitutes the largest habitat on Earth by volume, yet remains among the least explored. This vast realm is divided into depth zones: the me
R_5_02 — Megafauna Extinction: Quaternary Losses and the Overkill Debate
Between ~50,000 and 10,000 years ago, Earth lost the majority of its large-bodied animals (megafauna >44 kg) — woolly mammoths, ground sloths, saber-toothed cats, giant wombats, moa, and dozens of other spectacular speci
R_5_04 — Eusociality: Ants, Bees, and Termites
Eusociality — the highest level of social organization in the animal kingdom, characterized by reproductive division of labor (some individuals forgo reproduction to help others reproduce), cooperative brood care, and ov
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3721 documents across 34 fields