RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
2,196 results for "belief as tool" — page 34 of 110
INTERDOC_19 — Cosmic Impact, Mythology, and Cultural Memory
[KEY FINDING] The Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis (YDIH) — first proposed by Richard Firestone, Allen West, and Simon Warwick-Smith (2006–2007) — argues that a cosmic impact or airburst event ~12,800 BP triggered the You
ZB_4_16 — Mangrove Ecosystems
Mangroves are a group of approximately 70 species of salt-tolerant trees and shrubs that occupy the intertidal zone of tropical and subtropical coastlines worldwide, forming dense tidal forests that rank among the most p
ZB_4_02 — Extremophiles and Extreme Biology
Extremophiles are organisms that thrive in conditions lethal to most life — extreme heat, cold, acidity, radiation, pressure, salinity, or desiccation. Their discovery has fundamentally expanded understanding of life's b
ZB_3_20 — Kelp Forest Ecology
Kelp forests are underwater ecosystems formed by dense stands of large brown macroalgae (Order Laminariales), predominantly species of Macrocystis (giant kelp, reaching heights of 45–60 meters — among the fastest-growing
ZB_3_13 — Estuary and Mangrove Ecology: Where Rivers Meet the Sea
Estuaries — semi-enclosed coastal water bodies where freshwater river discharge meets and mixes with saline ocean water — and mangrove forests — tropical and subtropical intertidal forests dominated by salt-tolerant tree
G_1_16 — Ground-Penetrating Radar in Archaeological Prospection
Ground-Penetrating Radar (GPR) is a non-invasive geophysical survey technique that transmits short pulses of electromagnetic (radar) energy into the ground and records the reflections returned from subsurface interfaces
G_1_15 — Muon Tomography — Scanning Pyramids with Cosmic Rays
Muon tomography (also called muography) is a non-invasive imaging technique that uses naturally occurring cosmic-ray muons — subatomic particles produced when high-energy cosmic rays strike atoms in the upper atmosphere
O_1_18 — Ball Lightning and Earthquake Lights: Transient Luminous Phenomena
Ball lightning — a luminous, roughly spherical phenomenon observed during or near thunderstorms, typically 10–50 cm in diameter and lasting 1–10 seconds — and earthquake lights (EQLs) — luminous atmospheric phenomena obs
O_1_10 — Carrington Event and Space Weather Threats to Earth
The Carrington Event of September 1–2, 1859 was the most intense geomagnetic storm in recorded history — caused by a massive coronal mass ejection (CME) from the Sun that struck Earth's magnetosphere approximately 17.6 h
O_1_17 — Ley Lines: Scientific Investigation of Alleged Landscape Alignments
Ley lines — the hypothesis that significant ancient sites (megalithic monuments, churches, hillforts, springs, crossroads) are aligned along straight lines across the landscape — originated with Alfred Watkins (1855–1935
O_2_22 — Carolina Bay Anomalies
The Carolina bays are a collection of approximately 500,000 shallow, elliptical depressions concentrated along the Atlantic Coastal Plain of the southeastern United States, from New Jersey to northern Florida, with the h
O_2_11 — Impact Craters: Chicxulub, Vredefort, Sudbury, and Crater Morphology
Impact craters — circular depressions formed by the hypervelocity collision of asteroids, comets, or meteoroids with planetary surfaces — are among the most geologically significant features on Earth and throughout the s
O_2_18 — Ball Lightning and Earthquake Lights: Anomalous Atmospheric Luminosities
Ball lightning and earthquake lights (EQL) represent two of the most enduring unsolved problems in atmospheric and geophysics. Ball lightning — luminous spheres typically 10–50 cm in diameter, persisting for seconds to m
O_2_14 — Slow Earthquakes and Episodic Tremor: Silent Seismic Events
Slow earthquakes — a class of seismic events in which fault slip occurs over days to months rather than the seconds to minutes characteristic of conventional earthquakes — represent one of the most significant discoverie
O_3_11 — Brine Pools and Extremophile Environments
Brine pools, hydrothermal vents, and other extreme environments on Earth harbor thriving communities of extremophile organisms — life forms adapted to conditions once considered utterly incompatible with biology: tempera
O_3_09 — Lake Anomalies and Limnic Eruptions
Limnic eruptions (also called "lake overturns") are rare but catastrophic events in which dissolved carbon dioxide (CO₂) erupts suddenly from deep lake water, forming a dense gas cloud that displaces oxygen and can asphy
O_5_10 — Petrified Forests: Mineralization and Deep-Time Preservation
Petrified forests — accumulations of fossilized wood in which the original organic material has been replaced or infilled by minerals (most commonly silica in the form of quartz, chalcedony, opal, or agate) — provide ext
T_3_19 — Feral Children, Linguistic Deprivation, and Critical Period Evidence
Feral children — individuals who grew up with minimal or no human contact during their early years — provide the most compelling (and tragic) natural evidence for the critical period hypothesis in language acquisition. T
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_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
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3717 documents across 34 fields