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.
1,033 results for "Clonycavan Man" — page 31 of 52
T_1_12 — Jung's Later Works: Synchronicity, Aion, and the Red Book
Carl Gustav Jung's later works (roughly 1944–1961) represent the most ambitious, controversial, and philosophically daring phase of his career — extending analytical psychology from clinical psychotherapy into domains of
T_3_06 — Psychology of Decision Making
The psychology of decision making — transformed by Kahneman & Tversky's heuristics and biases program (1970s) and formalized in prospect theory (1979, Nobel Prize in Economics 2002) — demonstrates that human judgment and
T_3_14 — Cognitive Load Theory: Working Memory, Schema Acquisition, and Instructional Design
Cognitive Load Theory (CLT) — developed by John Sweller (University of New South Wales, 1988–present) — is the most influential theory connecting cognitive architecture (specifically the severe limitations of working mem
T_3_04 — Sleep Psychology and Dreams
Sleep occupies approximately one-third of human life yet its functions remain among the most actively investigated questions in neuroscience and psychology.
T_3_01 — Cognitive Biases & Heuristics
Cognitive biases are systematic deviations from rational judgment that arise from the brain's use of mental shortcuts (heuristics) to process complex information under uncertainty.
T_3_12 — Altered States of Consciousness: Trance, Meditation, and Sensory Deprivation
Altered states of consciousness (ASCs) — states that differ qualitatively from ordinary waking awareness in terms of perception, cognition, self-awareness, affect, and volition — have been systematically studied since th
T_5_10 — The Psychology of Money: Behavioral Economics, Financial Decision-Making, and Wealth Psychology
The psychology of money explores how cognitive biases, emotional responses, social pressures, and personality traits systematically distort financial decision-making — departing dramatically from the "rational economic a
T_5_04 — Psychology of Religion and Spirituality
The psychology of religion investigates why humans believe in supernatural agents, how religious practices affect cognition and well-being, and what psychological functions religion serves. The field was inaugurated by W
T_5_17 — Cultural Memory: Collective Remembrance, Tradition, and Identity
Cultural memory — the shared body of knowledge, narratives, images, and rituals through which a society constructs and maintains its sense of identity across generations — emerged as a distinct academic field in the late
D_2_20 — Central Asian Archaeological Sites: Merv, Afrasiab, and Ai-Khanoum
Central Asia — the vast region spanning modern Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and northern Afghanistan — was one of the most intensely urbanized and culturally productive regions of the ancient world, despite its
D_2_21 — Black Sea Deluge: Archaeological Evidence for Rapid Flooding
The Black Sea Deluge Hypothesis proposes that the Black Sea — now a large saline body connected to the Mediterranean via the Bosporus Strait — was once a significantly smaller, lower freshwater lake during the Last Glaci
D_2_02 — Pompeii and Herculaneum — Frozen in Volcanic Time
The Roman cities of Pompeii (~11,000 population) and Herculaneum (~5,000 population) were destroyed and simultaneously preserved by the catastrophic eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79. The eruption (now dated to October
D_2_04 — Baalbek — Colossal Stones of the Bekaa Valley
Baalbek (ancient Heliopolis — "City of the Sun") is one of the most monumental archaeological sites in the ancient world, located in the Bekaa Valley of eastern Lebanon at the foot of the Anti-Lebanon mountain range. The
D_1_15 — Angkor Thom and Bayon: Faces of the Devaraja
Angkor Thom ("Great City") — the last and most enduring capital city of the Khmer Empire — was built by Jayavarman VII (r. c. 1181–1218 CE) as a walled, moated urban complex of approximately 9 square kilometers in presen
D_1_13 — Borobudur — The Cosmic Mountain in Stone
Borobudur, located in Central Java, Indonesia, is the world's largest Buddhist monument — a colossal mandala-shaped structure composed of approximately 2 million blocks of andesite volcanic stone, rising ~35 m above its
D_1_03 — Megalithic Impossible Engineering
Ancient megalithic construction worldwide features stone blocks of extraordinary size and precision that challenge conventional explanations. Baalbek's Trilithon uses three 800-tonne stones set 7 meters above ground; Sac
D_5_22 — Sacred Temple Architecture: Ritual Space, Cosmic Geometry, and Divine Dwelling
Sacred temple architecture — the deliberate design of built environments to serve as dwelling places for deities, sites of ritual performance, and physical expressions of cosmological order — represents one of humanity's
D_5_17 — Torus Geometry in Ancient Architecture
The torus — a doughnut-shaped surface of revolution generated by rotating a circle around an axis coplanar with the circle — is one of the most fundamental geometries in nature, appearing in magnetic field lines, fluid d
D_5_06 — Fractals and Scale Invariance
Fractals — shapes and patterns that repeat at every scale of magnification — were formalized by Benoît Mandelbrot in The Fractal Geometry of Nature (1982) as a new mathematical language for describing the IRREGULAR forms
D_5_11 — Sacred Architecture Principles — Temple Orientation, Proportion, and Cosmic Design
Sacred architecture is the deliberate design of built structures to encode cosmological meaning, induce altered states of consciousness, and create a boundary between the profane world and sacred space. Across cultures a
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3721 documents across 34 fields