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.
1,294 results for "Plant of Youth" — page 31 of 65
ZB_3_05 — Seed Banks Dormancy and Germination
Seed dormancy — the inability of a viable seed to germinate under otherwise favorable conditions — is a critical survival strategy allowing plants to persist through unfavorable periods and disperse germination across ti
ZC_3_21 — Degrowth Economics
Degrowth (décroissance in French) is an intellectual and political movement that challenges the foundational assumption of modern economics: that economic growth — measured by GDP — is inherently desirable, sustainable,
ZC_3_16 — The Gig Economy: Labor, Platforms, and Precarity
The gig economy — defined as a labor market characterized by short-term, task-based, platform-mediated work rather than permanent employment — has grown from a marginal phenomenon to a significant sector of advanced econ
ZC_3_15 — Political Economy: Capitalism, Labor, and Institutional Structure
Political economy studies the interrelationship between political power and economic processes — how states, markets, classes, institutions, and ideologies shape the production, distribution, and consumption of wealth. T
ZC_3_23 — Commons Governance — Ostrom
Elinor Ostrom (1933–2012), professor of political science at Indiana University Bloomington, became the first woman to receive the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (2009) for her groundbreaking work demonstratin
ZC_3_07 — Disability Studies
Disability studies is an interdisciplinary field examining disability as a social, cultural, and political phenomenon rather than a purely medical one. The foundational distinction is between the medical model (disabilit
ZC_3_22 — Fourth Industrial Revolution
The Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) is a framework articulated by Klaus Schwab (founder and executive chairman of the World Economic Forum) in his 2016 book The Fourth Industrial Revolution, describing a new phase of
ZC_5_12 — Peasant Studies: Agrarian Change, Moral Economy, and Resistance
Peasant studies is an interdisciplinary field studying the economic, social, political, and cultural life of rural agricultural communities — peasantries — and the processes of agrarian change, resistance, and transforma
ZC_5_06 — Environmental Sociology: Risk, Justice, and Ecological Modernization
Environmental sociology studies the reciprocal relationships between human societies and their natural environments — how social structures, economic systems, political institutions, cultural beliefs, and power relations
ZC_5_11 — Digital Sociology: Platforms, Surveillance Capitalism, and Algorithmic Governance
Digital sociology examines how digital technologies — the internet, social media platforms, smartphones, algorithms, artificial intelligence, data analytics, and digital infrastructure — transform social life, institutio
ZC_5_19 — Network Society — Castells
Manuel Castells (born 1942 in Hellín, Spain), professor at the University of Southern California and emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, produced one of the most ambitious sociological analyses of the lat
ZC_1_03 — Cross-Cultural Psychology — Universal vs Culture-Specific Mind
Cross-cultural psychology investigates how cultural contexts shape psychological processes and whether any mental phenomena are truly universal. The central tension—between universal human nature (etic perspective) and c
ZC_1_04 — Crowd Psychology & Mass Movements
Crowd psychology — the study of how individuals behave differently when part of a large group — has been a central concern of social science since Gustave Le Bon's The Crowd (1895), one of the most influential and contro
ZC_1_17 — Conspiracy Theory Epidemiology: Why People Believe and How Conspiracism Spreads
Conspiracy theories — explanatory frameworks that attribute significant events to the secret machinations of powerful, malevolent groups — are not a modern pathology but a recurring feature of human cognitive and social
ZC_4_06 — Foucault — Power, Discourse, and Knowledge Control
Michel Foucault (1926–1984) — French philosopher, historian, and social theorist — is one of the most cited scholars in the humanities and social sciences, and his analyses of power, knowledge, and discourse have transfo
ZC_4_09 — Visual Anthropology: Ethnographic Film and Image as Evidence
Visual anthropology — the study of human societies through visual media (photography, film, video, digital platforms) and the anthropological analysis of visual systems — occupies a unique position at the intersection of
ZC_4_21 — Gift Economy Systems
The gift economy — a system of exchange in which goods and services are given without explicit agreement for immediate or future reward, creating obligations of reciprocity that bind individuals and communities — represe
ZC_2_01 — Propaganda, Persuasion, and Information Warfare
Propaganda and persuasion studies span rhetoric, psychology, political science, and media studies. From Edward Bernays's Freudian public relations (1928) and Walter Lippmann's manufactured consent (1922), through Goebbel
G_4_02 — Astrology as Historical Force and Political Tool
Astrology — the interpretation of celestial positions as meaningful for human affairs — is distinct from archaeoastronomy (→ [D_5_08](../../D_Sites_and_Artifacts/D5_Sacred_Geometry_Art_Symbolism/D_5_08_Archaeoastronomy_S
G_4_13 — HADD and Agency Detection — Why We See Beings Everywhere
The Hyperactive Agency Detection Device (HADD) — a term coined by cognitive scientist Justin Barrett (2000) building on work by Stewart Guthrie (1993) and Pascal Boyer (2001) — refers to the proposed cognitive mechanism
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