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.
1,689 results for "Age of Pisces" — page 44 of 85
K_1_02 — Biocentrism and Observer-Dependent Reality
Biocentrism, proposed by Robert Lanza (stem cell biologist) and Bob Berman (astronomer) in 2009, argues that consciousness is FUNDAMENTAL to the universe — not an accidental byproduct of matter — and that the universe's
K_1_14 — Qualia: The Subjective Experience Problem
Qualia (singular: quale) — the term used in philosophy of mind for the subjective, experiential properties of conscious mental states — the redness of red, the painfulness of pain, the taste of coffee, the felt quality o
K_4_18 — Near-Death Experiences: Evidence, Neuroscience, and the Consciousness Debate
Near-death experiences (NDEs) are complex subjective experiences reported by approximately 10–20% of cardiac arrest survivors, characterized by feelings of peace, tunnel vision, life review, encounters with deceased pers
Y_1_02 — Morphic Resonance and Sheldrake's Hypothesis
Morphic resonance is a hypothesis proposed by biologist Rupert Sheldrake (b. 1942, Cambridge-trained plant physiologist) that proposes nature operates by habits, not fixed laws, and that organisms and systems are influen
K_4_12 — Noosphere — Teilhard de Chardin, Vernadsky, and the Thinking Layer
The noosphere ("sphere of mind") is a concept developed independently by Russian geochemist Vladimir Vernadsky and French paleontologist-priest Pierre Teilhard de Chardin in the 1920s, describing a layer of collective hu
K_4_15 — Shared Death Experiences
Shared death experiences (SDEs) are reported phenomena in which a person who is physically healthy — typically a family member, caregiver, or bystander present at a death — describes experiencing some or all of the featu
K_4_21 — Quantum Approaches to Consciousness: A Rigorous Assessment
The hypothesis that consciousness depends on quantum-mechanical processes — most prominently in the Penrose-Hameroff Orchestrated Objective Reduction (Orch-OR) model — is one of the most polarizing claims in cognitive sc
K_2_14 — Brain Lateralization and Consciousness: The Divided Brain
Hemispheric lateralization — the functional specialization of the two cerebral hemispheres — is one of the most robust findings in neuroscience and has profound implications for understanding consciousness. The left hemi
K_2_02 — Phantom Limb, Body Schema, and Embodied Consciousness
Phantom limb phenomena — the vivid perception of a limb that has been amputated — provide a unique window into the neural construction of bodily self-awareness and the relationship between consciousness and embodiment. F
K_2_11 — Default Mode Network: Brain at Rest and Self-Referential Consciousness
The Default Mode Network (DMN) is a large-scale brain network that is most active when a person is not focused on the external environment — during mind-wandering, daydreaming, self-referential thought, autobiographical
K_2_09 — Neuroscience of Free Will
The neuroscience of free will centers on experiments testing whether conscious intention precedes or follows the neural preparation for action. Benjamin Libet's landmark 1983 experiments showed that the brain's "readines
K_2_08 — The Binding Problem in Consciousness
The binding problem asks how the brain creates unified, coherent conscious experiences from the distributed, specialized processing activity of millions of neurons across separate brain regions. When you see a red ball r
K_5_06 — Dreaming and Consciousness: Why We Dream
Dreaming — the experience of structured hallucinatory consciousness during sleep — is one of the most remarkable features of the human mind and a central challenge for any theory of consciousness. Every night, for a tota
K_5_08 — Metacognition: Thinking About Thinking
Metacognition — literally "cognition about cognition" or "thinking about thinking" — refers to the human capacity to monitor, evaluate, and regulate one's own cognitive processes. When you realize you don't understand a
E_3_02 — Catastrophic Flood Geomorphology
Earth's surface preserves dramatic evidence of catastrophic floods on a scale unimaginable today. The Channeled Scablands of Washington State were carved by the Missoula Floods (~13,000–15,000 BP): glacial Lake Missoula
E_3_09 — Messinian Salinity Crisis
The Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC) — approximately 5.96–5.33 million years ago (late Miocene) — was one of the most dramatic geological events in the Cenozoic: the near-complete desiccation (drying up) of the Mediterran
E_2_03 — Santorini/Thera Eruption and Minoan Collapse
Around 1600 BCE (revised range: 1628–1600 BCE), the volcanic island of Thera (modern Santorini) in the southern Aegean Sea experienced one of the largest volcanic eruptions in recorded human history — a VEI-7 event that
E_2_02 — Toba Supervolcano and the 74,000 BP Genetic Bottleneck
Approximately 74,000 years ago, the Toba supervolcano on the island of Sumatra (modern Indonesia) produced the largest volcanic eruption in the last 2 million years: a VEI-8 (Volcanic Explosivity Index maximum) event tha
E_2_20 — Medieval Warm Period: Climate Optimum and Civilizational Flourishing
The Medieval Warm Period (MWP) — increasingly referred to in scientific literature as the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA) to emphasize its complex spatial patterns — was a period of relatively warm climatic conditions acr
E_4_05 — Cyclical Destruction and Renewal
Nearly every human civilization has independently conceived of time not as a single arrow but as a wheel — creation, flourishing, decay, destruction, and rebirth cycling endlessly. The Hindu yuga system maps a 4.32-billi
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