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615 results for "social network analysis" — page 30 of 31
H_3_14 — Oral History Suppression: Favoring Text Over Voice
Academic historiography has systematically privileged written texts over oral sources — treating written documents as reliable evidence and oral traditions as unreliable, distorted, or "merely" mythological. This literac
H_3_02 — Suppression of Gnostic and Heterodox Christianity
From the earliest centuries of Christianity through the medieval period, a sustained campaign of suppression eliminated dozens of alternative Christian movements, destroying their texts and persecuting their adherents. B
H_3_11 — Provenance Research: Authentication, Repatriation, and Evidence Chains
Provenance research — the systematic investigation and documentation of an object's ownership history, findspot, chain of custody, and authentication — is the foundational discipline that determines whether an artifact i
H_4_04 — Soviet Science Suppression — Lysenkoism and Vavilov
The Lysenko affair (1928–1964) represents the most devastating case of ideological suppression of science in the 20th century. Trofim Denisovich Lysenko (1898–1976), an agronomist with minimal formal training, rose to do
H_4_20 — Cargo Cult Science Extended: Feynman, Pseudoscience Boundaries
"Cargo cult science" — a term coined by Richard Feynman in his 1974 Caltech commencement address — describes research that mimics the surface appearance of science (data collection, statistical analysis, academic publica
H_4_27 — Open Access and Democratization of Knowledge: Breaking the Paywalls
The modern academic publishing system creates a paradox: publicly funded research — produced by researchers paid by taxpayers, conducted in publicly funded institutions, peer-reviewed by unpaid volunteer referees — is ov
H_4_21 — Censorship of Ancient Art: What We Weren't Shown
The censorship of ancient art that depicts sexuality, nudity, sacred eroticism, violence, bodily functions, or other content considered offensive or inappropriate by later sensibilities represents a significant and well-
H_4_00 — Modern Corporate Suppression: Subfolder Summary
H_4_03 — Demonization Timeline
This document traces the single most important transformation in the history of mythology: the 2,500-year process by which the serpent/dragon went from the most POSITIVE universal symbol to the most NEGATIVE. Before appr
H_4_19 — Translation Bias: How Translators Shape Ancient Meaning
Translation — the rendering of texts from one language into another — is never a neutral, transparent process. Every translation involves choices about how to handle ambiguity, cultural concepts with no direct equivalent
H_4_02 — Two Factions Dynamic
Across virtually every ancient civilization, a recurring narrative describes TWO factions among non-human or divine beings: one that wants humanity to have knowledge, power, and expanded consciousness — and one that want
H_4_06 — Suppression of Psychedelic Research (1960s–2000s)
From the late 1940s through the mid-1960s, psychedelic substances — particularly LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) and psilocybin — were the subject of extensive legitimate scientific research, with over 1,000 peer-review
H_4_18 — Forbidden History: How Civilizations Erase Predecessors
A recurring pattern across human history is the systematic erasure, suppression, or appropriation of predecessor cultures by their successors — a phenomenon that operates through multiple mechanisms: physical destruction
P_3_17 — Foucault: Power, Knowledge & Discourse
Michel Foucault (1926–1984) was a French philosopher, historian of ideas, and social theorist whose work on the relationship between power, knowledge, and discourse transformed the humanities and social sciences. His cen
P_2_00 — Ethics Political: Subfolder Summary
ZE_5_00 — Applied Contemporary Ethics: Subfolder Summary
ZE_5_05 — Ethics of Civil Disobedience: Thoreau, Gandhi, King, and Nonviolent Resistance
Civil disobedience — the deliberate, public, nonviolent violation of law undertaken to protest injustice and appeal to the moral conscience of the community — occupies a distinctive position in political ethics. It is no
ZE_5_13 — Ethics of Charity and Philanthropy: Effective Altruism and Duty to Give
The ethics of charity and philanthropy interrogates the moral obligations of the wealthy toward the poor, the effectiveness and legitimacy of charitable giving as a response to poverty, and the emerging movement of effec
ZE_5_10 — Ethics of Silence and Complicity: Bystander Problem and Moral Inaction
Moral inaction — the failure to intervene, speak, or resist in the face of injustice — is one of the most pervasive and consequential forms of ethical failure. The bystander effect, famously studied after the murder of K
ZE_5_02 — Ethics of Cultural Appropriation: Borrowing, Theft, and Appreciation
Cultural appropriation — the adoption of elements (dress, music, cuisine, religious symbols, hairstyles, language) from one culture by members of another, typically from a marginalized or minority culture by members of a
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