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3,322 results for "F factor" — page 38 of 167
U_2_16 — Street Art, Graffiti & Urban Visual Culture
Street art and graffiti constitute a global visual culture tradition of unauthorized or semi-authorized artistic intervention in public space, ranging from simple name-based tags to elaborate murals, stencil works, wheat
U_4_04 — Masks & Performance Traditions Worldwide
Masks are among the most universal cultural artifacts in human history, appearing independently on every inhabited continent and serving functions spanning religious ritual, ancestor communication, healing, social contro
U_4_02 — Oral Literature — Epic, Myth, and Memory Before Writing
Before writing systems emerged (~3400 BCE in Sumer), all human knowledge was transmitted orally — through epic recitation, song, ritual chant, and structured narrative. The oral-formulaic theory developed by Milman Parry
U_4_01 — Sacred Dance — Ritual Movement from Shamanism to Sufi Whirling
Sacred dance represents one of humanity's oldest and most widespread forms of religious expression, predating written language and formal theology. From the Sufi sema (whirling ceremony) of the Mevlevi order to the Lakot
U_4_05 — Food as Culture — Sacred Cuisine & Taboos
Food is never merely nutrition — it is universally the medium through which societies construct identity, enforce social boundaries, communicate with the divine, encode ecological knowledge, mark rites of passage, and ex
X_2_04 — Suppression of Alternative Medicine: Historical Patterns
The consolidation of Western biomedicine into a monopolistic profession was not a purely scientific process — it was a deliberate institutional campaign driven by economic interests, class structures, and power consolida
X_5_14 — Emergency & Critical Care Medicine: From Battlefield Triage to Modern Intensive Care
Emergency medicine and critical care medicine represent two interconnected disciplines born from crisis — battlefield carnage, epidemic waves, and the realization that rapid intervention separates survival from death. Em
X_5_04 — Rehabilitation Medicine: Restoring Function After Injury and Illness
Rehabilitation medicine (also called physical medicine and rehabilitation — PM&R, or physiatry) is the medical specialty dedicated to restoring function, reducing disability, and improving quality of life for individuals
X_5_29 — Epidemiology and Pandemics: Disease, Civilization, and the Biology of Outbreaks
Epidemiology — the study of disease distribution and determinants in populations — has fundamentally shaped human history, often more decisively than warfare or politics. The Antonine Plague (165–180 CE, likely smallpox)
X_5_20 — Medical Regulation: Clinical Trials, Drug Safety, and the History of Oversight
Medical regulation — the system of laws, agencies, and protocols governing drug development, clinical trials, and medical device approval — evolved over centuries from virtually no oversight to the elaborate global frame
X_5_30 — Heart Rate Variability: Autonomic Function, Stress, and Integrative Health
Heart rate variability (HRV) — the variation in time intervals between consecutive heartbeats — is a non-invasive biomarker of autonomic nervous system (ANS) function that has emerged as one of the most widely studied ph
X_5_28 — Circadian Rhythm Disruption: Health Consequences of Modern Light Exposure
Circadian rhythms — endogenous ~24-hour oscillations in physiology and behavior — are generated by molecular clock genes (CLOCK, BMAL1, PER, CRY) operating in virtually every cell, coordinated by the master pacemaker in
X_5_10 — Geriatric Medicine: The Health of Aging Populations
Geriatric medicine (geriatrics) is the medical specialty focused on the health care of older adults — addressing the complex, often multimorbid, and functionally oriented needs of aging populations. The specialty recogni
X_5_09 — Pharmacology: The Science of Drugs and Their Actions
Pharmacology — the science of drugs — investigates how chemical substances interact with biological systems to produce therapeutic, toxic, or other effects. The discipline encompasses pharmacokinetics (what the body does
X_5_06 — Pediatrics: The Medicine of Childhood
Pediatrics is the branch of medicine devoted to the health and medical care of infants, children, and adolescents (from birth through age 18–21). The specialty arose from the recognition that children are not simply "sma
X_4_02 — Medical Ethics: Tuskegee, Helsinki, Informed Consent
The history of medical ethics is inseparable from the history of medical abuse — each major ethical framework emerged in direct response to documented exploitation. The Nuremberg Code (1947) establishing voluntary inform
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_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_18 — Immunotherapy: From Coley's Toxins to Checkpoint Inhibitors
Immunotherapy — harnessing the immune system to fight cancer and other diseases — was pioneered by William Coley (Memorial Hospital, New York), who injected bacterial toxins into inoperable sarcomas beginning in 1891 and
X_3_14 — Cardiology: The Science of the Heart
Cardiology — the branch of medicine dealing with disorders of the heart and cardiovascular system — addresses the leading cause of death worldwide: cardiovascular disease (CVD), responsible for ~17.9 million deaths per y
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