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.
2,036 results for "EU AI Act" — page 41 of 102
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_1_05 — Psychology of Religion & Spiritual Experience
The psychology of religion — the empirical study of religious and spiritual experience, belief, and behavior — was inaugurated by William James's The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902), which established that relig
G_4_06 — Sound Healing — Evidence, Pseudoscience, and Ancient Practice
Sound healing occupies a uniquely contested space where genuine medical science, ancient spiritual practice, and modern pseudoscience coexist and often blur together. On one end, music therapy is FDA-recognized for pain
G_3_10 — David Bohm's Implicate Order and Holographic Universe
David Bohm (1917–1992) was one of the most original and philosophically minded physicists of the 20th century, contributing both rigorous quantum mechanics and sweeping metaphysical visions. His pilot wave theory (1952)
O_1_16 — Geomagnetic-Consciousness Mechanism
The hypothesis that Earth's geomagnetic field influences human consciousness encompasses several distinct mechanisms: biogenic magnetite in the brain as a magnetoreceptor, Schumann resonance coupling with neural oscillat
O_1_19 — Naga Fireballs
The Naga fireballs (bung fai phaya nak, บั้งไฟพญานาค, literally "Naga sky rockets") are glowing orbs reported to rise from the Mekong River in the Nong Khai Province of northeastern Thailand (and the opposite Laotian ban
O_2_20 — Hollow Earth Theory
The Hollow Earth theory proposes that the planet's interior is partially or entirely hollow, potentially containing habitable spaces, inner suns, atmospheres, or even advanced civilizations. This idea has ancient roots i
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
T_2_07 — Psychology of Addiction
Addiction — compulsive engagement with a substance or behavior despite harmful consequences — is now understood as a chronic brain disorder involving neuroplastic changes in reward, motivation, memory, and executive cont
T_2_11 — Psychology of Aging and Gerontology
The psychology of aging examines cognitive, emotional, and social changes across the adult lifespan, integrating insights from developmental psychology, neuroscience, and gerontology. A central distinction in cognitive a
T_2_19 — Eating Disorders
Eating disorders (EDs) — including anorexia nervosa (AN), bulimia nervosa (BN), binge eating disorder (BED), and avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) — affect an estimated 9% of the global population over th
T_2_13 — Placebo and Nocebo Effects
The placebo effect — a measurable physiological or psychological improvement in response to an inert treatment — is one of the most robust and well-documented phenomena in medicine and psychology, while the nocebo effect
T_2_18 — Schizophrenia & Psychotic Disorders
Schizophrenia is a severe psychiatric disorder affecting approximately 24 million people worldwide (WHO, 2022), characterized by positive symptoms (hallucinations, delusions, disorganized thought), negative symptoms (anh
T_2_17 — Depression & Mood Disorders
Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) affects an estimated 280 million people worldwide (WHO, 2023) and is the leading cause of disability globally. The neurobiological understanding of depression has undergone a paradigm shif
T_1_16 — Positive Psychology: The PERMA Model and Human Flourishing
Positive psychology — the scientific study of optimal human functioning, well-being, and the conditions enabling individuals and communities to flourish — was formally launched as a distinct movement by Martin Seligman d
T_3_11 — Color Psychology and Synesthesia
Color psychology examines how color perception influences cognition, emotion, and behavior, while synesthesia is a neurological condition in which stimulation of one sensory modality automatically triggers perception in
T_3_17 — Synesthesia
Synesthesia (from Greek syn- "together" + aisthēsis "sensation") is a neurological condition in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway automatically triggers involuntary experiences in a second pathway — p
T_5_14 — Peak Experiences and Ecstasy: Maslow, Mystical States, and Transformative Moments
Peak experiences — moments of ecstatic joy, profound meaning, ego-dissolution, and felt unity with the world — were identified by Abraham Maslow (1964) as among the most important experiences in human life: rare, spontan
D_2_13 — Palmyra: Crossroads of Civilizations
Palmyra (ancient Tadmor; Arabic: Tadmur) — an oasis city in the Syrian desert approximately 215 km northeast of Damascus — rose to extraordinary prominence between the first and third centuries CE as a caravan trade hub
D_2_14 — Valley of the Kings: Royal Tombs and Afterlife Architecture
The Valley of the Kings (Arabic: Wadi al-Muluk; ancient Egyptian: Ta-sekhet-ma'at, "The Great Field") — a narrow, arid wadi on the west bank of the Nile opposite ancient Thebes (modern Luxor) in Upper Egypt — served as t
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3721 documents across 34 fields