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2,528 results for "CI" — page 34 of 127
ZE_1_04 — Virtue Ethics — Aristotle to MacIntyre
Virtue ethics is the ethical tradition that focuses not on rules for action (deontology — ZE_1_06) or on consequences (utilitarianism — ZE_1_05) but on character: What kind of person should I be? What human excellences (
ZE_1_01 — Ethics Across Civilizations: Universal Moral Patterns
Despite vast cultural differences, virtually every civilization in human history has independently developed strikingly similar core moral principles: reciprocity (the Golden Rule), prohibitions against murder and theft,
ZE_2_01 — Alchemy and Transmutation Across Civilizations
Alchemy — the art and science of transformation — emerged independently or semi-independently in at least three civilizations: Egyptian-Greek-Arabic-European (the Western tradition), Chinese (waidan/neidan), and Indian (
N_4_13 — CIA MKUltra: Declassified Mind Control Programs
MKUltra (also rendered MKULTRA or MK-ULTRA) was a covert CIA program of illegal human experimentation running from 1953 to 1973, authorized by Director Allen Dulles and overseen by chemist Sidney Gottlieb of the Technica
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_1_15 — The Chirality Problem: Why Life Uses Left-Handed Amino Acids
One of the deepest unsolved problems in the origin of life is homochirality — the fact that all known life on Earth uses almost exclusively L-amino acids (left-handed) for proteins and D-sugars (right-handed) for nucleic
S_4_04 — Pandemic Risk — Ancient Plagues, Antibiotic Resistance, and Biosecurity
Pandemics have repeatedly reshaped human civilization, from the Plague of Justinian (541 CE, ~25-50 million dead, Yersinia pestis confirmed via ancient DNA) to the Black Death (1347-1353, killing 30-60% of Europe's popul
S_1_06 — Internet and Digital Civilization — From ARPANET to the Algorithmic Age
The internet — humanity's most transformative communication infrastructure — evolved from a U.S. military research network (ARPANET, 1969) through academic adoption, commercialization (1990s), and the World Wide Web (Ber
S_5_02 — Surveillance Technology — Panopticism, Mass Surveillance, and the Architecture of Control
Surveillance technology has evolved from Bentham's architectural Panopticon concept (1787) through the analog era of telephone wiretapping and photographic surveillance to the digital panopticon of the 21st century — whe
S_5_05 — Smart Cities and Urban Technology
Smart cities integrate digital technology, sensors, and data analytics into urban infrastructure to improve efficiency, sustainability, and quality of life. The concept gained momentum in the 2010s, driven by corporate i
S_2_04 — Synthetic Biology — Engineering Life from First Principles
Synthetic biology represents the convergence of molecular biology, engineering, and computer science — applying rational design principles to living systems. The field was catalyzed by two landmark achievements: the cons
S_2_13 — Xenotransplantation: Cross-Species Organs and Bioengineered Tissues
Xenotransplantation — the transplantation of organs, tissues, or cells from one species to another — is being pursued as a solution to the critical global organ shortage. In the US alone, over 100,000 people await organ
F_2_19 — Obsidian Trade Networks in the Ancient World
Obsidian — volcanic glass formed by rapid cooling of silica-rich lava — was the most extensively traded lithic material in the ancient world, coveted for its conchoidal fracture producing edges sharper than modern surgic
F_2_16 — Numismatic Evidence for Ancient Trade: Coins as Contact Proof
Coins — small, durable, precisely dated, and geographically attributable objects — are among the most powerful archaeological evidence for long-distance trade, cultural contact, and economic integration in the ancient wo
F_2_14 — Ancient Glass Bead Trade: From Mesopotamia to Sub-Saharan Africa
Glass beads are among the most archaeologically informative objects in the ancient world — small, durable, widely traded, and chemically distinctive — making them exceptional tracers of long-distance exchange networks sp
F_4_14 — Ancient DNA and Migration Evidence
Ancient DNA (aDNA) analysis has transformed the study of human migration and cultural connections, providing direct genetic evidence for population movements that were previously inferred indirectly from archaeology, lin
F_3_14 — Domestication: How Humans Reshaped Species and Themselves
Domestication — the multigenerational process by which humans selectively breed wild species, producing organisms that are genetically, morphologically, and behaviorally distinct from their wild ancestors and dependent o
ZA_2_19 — Holographic Principle & AdS/CFT Correspondence: Gravity as Information
The holographic principle — the proposition that all information contained within a volume of space can be encoded on the boundary surface enclosing that volume — ranks among the most profound conceptual shifts in theore
ZA_2_03 — General and Special Relativity — Einstein's Revolution
Albert Einstein's two theories of relativity — special (1905) and general (1915) — fundamentally reshaped the understanding of space, time, mass, energy, and gravity. Special relativity, built on Lorentz invariance and t
ZA_3_05 — Neutrino Physics: Oscillations, Mass, and the Ghost Particle
Neutrinos are the lightest known massive particles, interacting only via the weak force and gravity. Three flavors exist — electron, muon, and tau — and they can transform between flavors as they propagate (neutrino osci
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