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2,945 results for "Dia de los Muertos" — page 31 of 148
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_09 — Narrative Psychology: Story, Identity, and the Storied Self
Narrative psychology — the study of how humans make sense of their lives, construct identity, and organize experience through storytelling — emerged as a distinct field in the 1980s–1990s through the work of Jerome Brune
T_5_11 — Self-Deception: Motivated Ignorance, Cognitive Dissonance, and the Limits of Self-Knowledge
Self-deception — the process by which individuals maintain beliefs, self-images, or narratives that are contradicted by available evidence, often without conscious awareness of doing so — sits at the intersection of phil
T_5_12 — Media Psychology: Screen Effects, Social Media, and the Psychology of Digital Life
Media psychology — the study of how media (television, film, video games, social media, smartphones) affect cognition, emotion, behavior, and well-being — has become one of the most publicly debated areas of psychology,
T_5_08 — The Psychology of Awe and Wonder: Vastness, Self-Diminishment, and Transformative Experience
Awe — the emotion arising from encounters with vast, powerful, or complex phenomena that exceed one's current mental frameworks and demand cognitive accommodation (schema revision) — has emerged since the early 2000s as
D_1_07 — Teotihuacan — City of the Gods
Teotihuacan — the name itself meaning "the place where gods were born" in Nahuatl, given by the Aztecs who found the city already in ruins — was one of the largest cities in the ancient world, reaching a peak population
D_1_01 — Göbekli Tepe
Göbekli Tepe (~9600–8000 BCE) in southeastern Turkey is the world's oldest known monumental architecture, predating agriculture, pottery, and settled civilization by millennia. Its T-shaped pillars (up to 5.5m tall, 16 t
D_5_08 — Archaeoastronomy Synthesis
Archaeoastronomy — the study of how past peoples understood and used celestial phenomena — reveals a depth and sophistication of ancient astronomical knowledge that consistently challenges conventional timelines of scien
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_3_10 — Derinkuyu and Cappadocian Underground Cities
Derinkuyu — the deepest known underground city in Cappadocia, central Turkey — extends approximately 85 meters (280 feet) below the surface across 18 recognized levels (8 fully excavated and open to visitors), with the c
D_3_08 — Çatalhöyük: Neolithic Urbanism and the Origins of Settled Life
Çatalhöyük is a Neolithic and Chalcolithic settlement located on the Konya Plain of central Anatolia, Turkey, occupied from approximately 7500 to 5700 BCE. At its peak the site housed an estimated 3,000–8,000 inhabitants
D_4_09 — Cenotes: Maya Sacred Wells, Karst Hydrology, and Underworld Cosmology
Cenotes (from Yucatec Maya dz'onot or ts'onot) are natural sinkholes formed by the dissolution and collapse of limestone bedrock in the Yucatan Peninsula, exposing the vast underground freshwater aquifer beneath. Over 6,
D_4_08 — Underwater City of Pavlopetri: Bronze Age Submerged Site
Pavlopetri — a submerged settlement lying at shallow depths (1–4 m) just offshore of the Pounta headland in Vatika Bay, southern Laconia (Peloponnese, Greece), near the island of Elafonisos — is the oldest known submerge
B_5_06 — Deification of Natural Phenomena: Thunder, Earthquakes, Disease as Entities
Across virtually every documented human culture, natural phenomena — storms, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, epidemics, drought — have been personified as intentional agents: gods, demons, or spirits with desires, emoti
B_5_09 — The Underworld: Descent Myths and Subterranean Realms
The Underworld — the realm beneath or beyond the living world where the dead reside, spirits dwell, and cosmic forces operate — is among the most universal motifs in human mythology. Virtually every major civilization ha
B_5_10 — Death Personifications: Grim Reaper, Yama, Ankou, Santa Muerte
Across world cultures, death has been personified as a distinct entity — a being who arrives to claim the dying, separates the soul from the body, or presides over the realm of the dead. The Western Grim Reaper (skeletal
B_4_18 — African Secret Societies (Poro, Sande, Ogboni)
West Africa's secret societies — Poro (men's), Sande (women's), and Ogboni (elder council) — represent some of the most powerful and enduring socio-religious institutions in the region, governing initiation, education, c
B_4_05 — Ancestor Spirits and Ancestral Worship Traditions
Ancestor veneration is arguably the most universal religious practice in human history, attested in every inhabited continent from the Neolithic onward. It rests on a shared premise: the dead do not disappear but persist
B_4_03 — Psychopomp Traditions — Guides of the Dead Across Cultures
A psychopomp (from Greek psychopompos — "guide of souls") is a being, deity, spirit, or figure whose primary function is to escort the dead from the world of the living to the afterlife. This is one of the most universal
B_4_19 — Smithing & Craft Deities: Divine Artisans Across Cultures
Smithing and craft deities represent one of the most consistent divine archetypes across cultures, reflecting the deep association between metallurgical skill and supernatural power in premodern societies. From Hephaestu
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