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2,501 results for "La Niña" — page 42 of 126
H_4_10 — Corporate Suppression of Science
One of the most systematic and consequential forms of knowledge suppression in the modern era is the deliberate corporate manufacture of scientific doubt to protect profitable but harmful products. The strategy was pione
P_1_11 — The Demiurge: Creator God in Philosophy and Religion
The Demiurge (from Greek dēmiourgos, "craftsman" or "artisan") is a concept of a divine creator figure responsible for fashioning the physical universe, most famously developed in Plato's dialogue Timaeus (~360 BCE) and
P_2_13 — Philosophy of Biology: Teleology, Species Concepts, and Function
The philosophy of biology examines the conceptual foundations, explanatory structures, and ontological commitments of the biological sciences — asking questions that biology itself presupposes but does not typically addr
P_2_11 — Deontological Ethics: Duty, Rights, and the Categorical Imperative
Deontological ethics (from Greek deon, "duty" or "obligation") is the family of moral theories holding that the rightness or wrongness of an action depends on the action's conformity to moral rules, duties, or rights — n
ZE_5_05 — Ethics of Civil Disobedience: Thoreau, Gandhi, King, and Nonviolent Resistance
Civil disobedience — the deliberate, public, nonviolent violation of law undertaken to protest injustice and appeal to the moral conscience of the community — occupies a distinctive position in political ethics. It is no
ZE_4_05 — Ethics of Global Justice and Human Rights
Global justice asks what moral obligations individuals and states owe to people beyond their borders, and whether justice requires global institutional reform. Human rights — rights held by all persons simply by virtue o
ZE_4_04 — Ethics of Free Speech and Censorship
Free speech and its limits constitute one of the most contentious areas of applied ethics and political philosophy, touching on fundamental questions about the relationship between individual liberty, social harm, and st
ZE_4_08 — Ethics of Archaeology and Cultural Heritage
The ethics of archaeology and cultural heritage examines moral obligations surrounding the excavation, ownership, display, and repatriation of cultural materials. The field emerged from a colonial history where Western i
ZE_4_01 — Just War Theory and Ethics of Violence
Just war theory — the ethical framework for evaluating when the use of military force is morally justified and how it may be conducted — has roots in classical antiquity (Cicero, Augustine) and medieval theology (Aquinas
ZE_3_18 — Frontier Ethics Survey
Frontier ethics examines the moral dimensions of technologies and practices at the edge of current scientific capability — where regulatory frameworks, ethical traditions, and public understanding lag behind technologica
ZE_3_23 — AI Ethics Frameworks
AI ethics frameworks have proliferated rapidly since 2016 as artificial intelligence systems moved from research laboratories into consequential real-world applications — criminal sentencing, hiring, lending, medical dia
ZE_2_09 — Philosophy of Sovereignty
Sovereignty — the concept of supreme authority within a territory — has undergone radical transformation from its theological origins to contemporary debates about humanitarian intervention, indigenous self-determination
N_2_14 — Priory of Sion — Myth & Reality
The Priory of Sion (French: Prieuré de Sion) is one of the most thoroughly investigated alleged secret societies in modern history — and one whose fraudulent origins are now definitively established. [KEY FINDING] The Pr
N_2_10 — Bektashi Order: Sufi-Christian-Shamanist Syncretism
The Bektashi Order (Bektaşiyye) is one of the most remarkable religious movements in Islamic history — a Sufi order (tariqa) that developed in Anatolia from the 13th century onward, incorporating an extraordinary degree
N_5_06 — Cargo Cults as Modern Mystery Schools: Anthropological Analysis
Cargo cults — the millenarian religious movements that emerged primarily in Melanesia (Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu, Solomon Islands, and other Pacific islands) during and after contact with Western industrial civilization,
R_4_10 — Cetacean Evolution: Whales, Dolphins, and the Return to the Sea
The evolution of cetaceans — whales, dolphins, and porpoises — from small, four-legged terrestrial mammals to the largest animals ever to live on Earth is one of the best-documented major evolutionary transitions, suppor
R_4_07 — Venom Evolution and Biochemical Arms Races
Venom — a cocktail of bioactive molecules injected via a specialized delivery apparatus (fangs, stingers, harpoons, nematocysts, spurs) to subdue prey, deter predators, or aid in competition — has evolved independently o
R_4_09 — Parasitism and Host-Parasite Coevolution
Parasitism — a symbiotic relationship in which one organism (the parasite) benefits at the expense of another (the host) — is arguably the most common lifestyle on Earth. By some estimates, over 40% of all described spec
R_3_13 — Evolution of the Immune System
The immune system is one of evolution's most elaborate and costly creations — vertebrate adaptive immunity alone employs V(D)J recombination to generate over 10¹¹ distinct antibody specificities from fewer than 400 gene
R_5_09 — Color in Nature: Structural Color, Pigmentation, and Signaling
Color in nature serves functions spanning camouflage, warning, mate attraction, thermoregulation, and protection from UV radiation — produced through two fundamentally different mechanisms: pigmentary color (selective ab
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