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1,868 results for "Alexander the Great" — page 37 of 94
X_1_20 — Comparative Traditional Medicine: TCM, Ayurveda, Unani & Kampo
The world's major traditional medicine systems — Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), Ayurveda (India), Unani (Greco-Arabic), and Kampo (Japan) — represent independent but structurally parallel attempts to systematize hea
X_1_04 — Egyptian and Mesopotamian Medicine: Papyri, Pharmacology
Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia produced the earliest known written medical records — the Edwin Smith Papyrus (~1600 BCE, copied from ~2500 BCE originals) represents the oldest known surgical text with its rational, case-b
X_4_01 — Personalized and Genomic Medicine
Personalized medicine (also called precision medicine) represents the shift from one-size-fits-all treatment to therapies tailored to an individual's genetic profile, biomarkers, and molecular disease characteristics. Th
X_4_06 — Dentistry and Oral Health History
Dentistry — the treatment of diseases and conditions of the oral cavity — has evolved from folk remedy and brutal extraction to a sophisticated medical specialty. Ancient: evidence of dental work extends to the Neolithic
X_4_09 — Public Health and Sanitation
Public health and sanitation — organized efforts to prevent disease, promote health, and prolong life through collective action — have arguably saved more lives than all other medical interventions combined. Clean water,
X_4_11 — Bioethics of Enhancement
The bioethics of enhancement addresses the moral, social, and philosophical questions raised by using medical and technological interventions not merely to treat disease or restore function, but to augment normal human c
X_3_20 — Infectious Disease & Epidemiology
Infectious diseases have shaped human history more profoundly than any other biological force. The germ theory of disease, established by Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch in the 1860s–1880s, transformed medicine from specul
X_3_26 — Chronobiology & Circadian Medicine
Chronobiology — the study of biological rhythms — has emerged from a niche curiosity to a Nobel Prize–winning discipline with profound implications for medicine, metabolism, and mental health. [KEY FINDING] The 2017 Nobe
X_3_08 — Cancer Research History
Cancer — the uncontrolled proliferation of abnormal cells — has been recognized since antiquity and remains the second leading cause of death globally (~10 million deaths in 2022, WHO). The history of cancer research is
X_3_11 — Battlefield Medicine: Surgical Innovation Under Fire
Battlefield medicine — the practice of treating wounded soldiers under active combat conditions — has been one of the most powerful and paradoxical engines of medical innovation in human history. The pressure of mass cas
X_3_16 — Allergy & Autoimmune Disease: Immune Dysregulation and Self-Recognition
Allergy and autoimmune disease represent opposite failures of immune discrimination: allergy is an exaggerated immune response to harmless environmental antigens (allergens), while autoimmune disease involves immune atta
X_3_01 — Surgical History: From Trepanation to Robotics
Surgery — the physical opening and manipulation of the body to treat disease, injury, or deformity — has one of the longest and most dramatic histories in medicine. Prehistory: trepanation (trephination) — cutting or bor
X_3_17 — Wound Healing: Coagulation, Tissue Repair, and Chronic Wounds
Wound healing is a highly coordinated biological process involving four overlapping phases: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. The coagulation cascade — a proteolytic chain reaction of clotting fact
X_3_12 — History of Epidemiology: From Miasma to Molecular Surveillance
Epidemiology — the study of the distribution and determinants of disease in populations — is the foundational science of public health, responsible for identifying disease causes, informing prevention strategies, and gui
INTERDOC_76 — Spatial Memory Architectures and Non-Local Consciousness Geometry
[KEY FINDING] The most efficient way for human consciousness to retain abstract, non-spatial information is to forcibly encode it into a 3D spatial construct (the Memory Palace). Modern fMRI demonstrates that mnemonic ch
W_4_01 — Maya Epigraphy, Astronomy, and Calendar Science
The Maya civilization developed one of the most sophisticated writing systems in the pre-Columbian Americas — a mixed logographic-syllabic script that recorded history, astronomy, mythology, and ritual on stone monuments
W_4_18 — Tiwanaku and Wari: Pre-Inca Andean Empires
Tiwanaku (Tiahuanaco) and Wari (Huari) were the two dominant polities of the Andean Middle Horizon (c. 500–1000 CE), together representing the first large-scale expansionary states in South American history and the most
W_4_12 — Tiwanaku: Altiplano Civilization and Raised-Field Agriculture
Tiwanaku (also spelled Tiahuanaco) was a major pre-Columbian civilization centered at the site of the same name on the Bolivian Altiplano (high plateau), approximately 3,850 meters above sea level and 20 km southeast of
W_4_06 — Dreamtime Songlines and Aboriginal Navigation
Songlines (also called dreaming tracks or song paths) are one of humanity's most extraordinary intellectual achievements — a vast network of songs that simultaneously encode mythological narrative, geographic navigation
W_4_03 — Andean Civilizations — Chavín, Nazca, Tiwanaku, Caral
The Andean region produced one of the world's great independent civilizations — arguably the most underappreciated. From Caral (~3000 BCE, contemporary with Egyptian pyramids and Sumerian Ur) to the Inca (conquered by Sp
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